Posted on 01/01/2026 2:16:12 PM PST by nickcarraway
Added sugars are difficult to quickly spot because many companies use clever marketing to distract consumers.
Many consumers feel pride in avoiding the glazed pastries in the supermarket and instead opting for “all natural” granola that comes packed with extra protein. Same goes for low-fat yogurts “made with real fruit,” “organic” plant-based milks and bottled “superfood” smoothies.
Buyer beware: Healthy grocery buzzwords like those often cover up an unhealthy amount of sugar. Added sugars are difficult to quickly spot because many companies use clever marketing to distract consumers, said Nicole Avena, a professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at Mount Sinai Medical School and Princeton University who has studied added sugars.
Avena said while some health-forward brands know people are starting to become aware of the hazards of added sugars, “a lot of the bigger brands don’t worry so much about people’s health.”
(Excerpt) Read more at nbcnews.com ...
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I was looking at the nutrition bars a PhD I worked with was eating. One of the top ingredients was “evaporated cane juice”. That’s what you and I call sugar. Sneaky, sneaky. He was not happy because he was paying attention to his nutrition.
It’s NBC so STFU!
I've been hearing about warnings for yogurt for years now.
Anything you buy that is ready to eat is going to be way higher in salt and sugar than anything you make yourself.
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