Read Those Food Labels to Avoid Hidden Sugars!

by Tara Achkar

For centuries, sugar has been used as a flavor-enhancing base ingredient in many foods including breads, pastas, pastries and cakes. These days, added sugars are included in many commonly available foods and beverages, including products promoted as  “natural” and “organic.”

A study conducted by The George Institute for Global Health, an independent medical research institute in Australia, revealed that around 70% of packaged foods contain added sugar.

While there are a lot of conflicting theories about which diet is the healthiest, limiting your intake of sugar is one of the few things nearly all health experts agree upon. Properly reading food labels in order to understand the amount of sugar going into your body is, therefore, one of the first steps to healthier eating habits. However, reducing your sugar intake is not always as easy as it sounds, often due to confusing food labeling.

So, what are the most common “healthy” foods that actually have lots of sugar hiding in them?

  • Cereals and packaged oats sometimes contain more sugar than a piece of cake.
  • Packaged breads including ‘’whole grain’’ are usually loaded with artificial sugars to enhance texture and taste.
  • Commercial granola and protein bars generally include added sugars to pick up the flavors and increase their shelf life.
  • ‘’Low calorie’’ drinks, including blended juices, sodas and energy drinks are packed with artificial sweeteners and chemicals.  
  • Fat-free and diet foods: When fat is removed for a product, it is usually replaced with something else and this is often sugar.
  • Most canned vegetables include sugar and preservatives that are used to enhance flavors and increase shelf life.
  • Sweetened and frozen yogurts contain high levels of added sugar.  
  • Bottled sauces, condiments and marinades, including pre-made salad dressing, pasta sauces, spicy sauces and dips, are some examples of foods that you would not expect to sugar-laden.
  • Dried fruits: While fruit contains the naturally occurring sugar fructose, when it is dried, the sugar becomes concentrated and dried fruits can become sources of highly concentrated sugar.
  • ‘Fresh’ fruit juices: Juiced fruits are nutritionally poor compared to the full fruits. In fact, they contain no fiber and are very high in sugar. 350 ml of freshly squeezed apple juice can contain up to 10 teaspoons of sugar. It’s therefore definitely better to eat your fruits and juice your vegetables.

Hidden sugars are called ‘’hidden’’ for a reason and go by many different names – here are 56 different names for added sugars used on food labels that can help you identify hidden sugars in food products:

Agave nectar

Barbados sugar

Barley malt

Beet sugar

Brown sugar

Buttered syrup

Cane Juice

Cane Sugar

Caramel

Carob Syrup

Castor sugar

Confectioner’s sugar

Corn syrup

Corn Syrup Solids

Date Sugar

Dehydrated cane Juice

Demerara Sugar               

Dextran

Dextrose

Diastatic malt

Diastase

Ethyl maltol

Free flowing brown sugars

Fructose

Fruit juice

Fruit juice concentrate

Galactose

Glucose solids

Glucose Mannitol

Golden sugar

golden syrup

Grape sugar

High fructose corn syrup

Honey

Icing sugar

Invert sugar

Lactose

Malt

Malt syrup

Maltodextrin

Maltose

Maple syrup

Molasses

Muscovado

Panocha

Powdered sugar

Raw sugar

Refiner’s syrup

Rice syrup

Sorbitol

Sorghum syrup

Sucrose

Sugar (granulated)

Treacle

Turbinado sugar

Yellow sugar

So, the next time you’re in the supermarket or health store, carefully inspect food labels and avoid those hidden sugars!

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