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Low-Carb Boom Isn't Just for Dieters Anymore
The New York Times ^ | February 19, 2004 | KATE ZERNIKE and MARIAN BURROS

Posted on 02/18/2004 10:22:47 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife

LOS ANGELES — Marc and Connie Foreman are not on the Atkins, South Beach, Zone, Lindora or any other low-carbohydrate diet.

Yet here they were, waiting for a table at T.G.I. Friday's, a restaurant they have only driven past for 25 years, because Mr. Foreman had seen a commercial earlier in the day advertising one of its Atkins-approved menu items, a New York strip steak with blue cheese (broccoli, no fries).

"I won't cut out carbs completely," said Ms. Foreman, a teacher, "but when you think about your diet — the bread, the potatoes, the pasta — it makes sense to cut out that stuff."

Low-carb mania has spread beyond the millions of low-carb dieters. Food industry analysts say a far greater number of people are now "carb aware," even carb-phobic, cutting out those foods not as a way to lose weight, but because of a general sense that they are unhealthy. That is prompting changes in the way food is made, packaged and sold like nothing since the early 1990's, when even nondieters began loading their carts with low-fat yogurts and snacks..

"A year ago, if you asked consumers what they watch, 11 percent would have said carbs," said Michael Polk, chief operating officer at Unilever-Best Foods, which recently introduced 18 low-carbohydrate versions of items like Skippy peanut butter and Ragu tomato sauce. "Today if you ask, 40 percent of consumers say they are watching carbs. In our opinion, this has evolved into a major shift in consumer behavior."

The growth has even outpaced the government's ability to regulate the products and their labeling. Since 1999, 728 products that claim to be low in carbohydrates have been introduced, according to the Global New Products Database of Mintel International Group, a market research company.

Last month, representatives of 450 companies, including Kraft, Con- Agra and Wal-Mart, gathered at a two day Low-Carb Summit in Denver to discuss how to take advantage of what some analysts predict will be a $25 billion market for low-carb products and services this year: everything from low-carb pasta to low-carb European barge cruises and hotel "get a-weighs."

In Southern California, two entrepreneurs (and Atkins dieters) last month opened the first two in a chain of low-carb supermarkets called Pure Foods, and individual low-carb markets are opening nationwide. In January, a new magazine called LowCarb Living hit newsstands.

The boom in low-fat products in the 1980's and 90's reflected the F.D.A.'s recommendations as well as years of studies showing that low-fat diets could reduce the risks of heart diseases and various cancers. But the surge in low-carb products primarily reflects the runaway success of books about the low-carb diets, which are being used by an estimated 10 million to 25 million people.

Doctors have warned that high levels of saturated fats in some low-carbohydrate, high-protein diets can lead to heart disease and kidney problems. And critics worry that just as some people took low-fat as a license to eat the whole carton of light ice cream, they will take low-carb as permission to eat the entire crustless cheesecake, fattening up on calories either way.

"As soon as you tell people to eat supplemental foods, people think there are free calories and there are not," said Frank Sacks, professor of cardiovascular disease prevention at the Harvard School of Public Health.

This is a particularly American way of thinking about food, said Greg Critser, author of "Fat Land: How Americans Became the Fattest People in the World."

"The Europeans don't have this mentality," Mr. Critser said. "There's more a culture of the enjoyment of food, not just the amount of food. The problem is that behind whatever diet is in ascent in this country, the background noise is one and the same: a license to gluttony."

According to a survey of 1,182 people conducted in December for LowCarbiz, a new publication tracking the boom, 8.3 percent of respondents said they were on a low-carb diet and 20 percent said they were not on a diet but had been cutting back on high-carbohydrate foods.

Cathryn Kennedi, 42, had gone to Pure Foods in Santa Monica, Calif., to pick up low-carb bagels, pasta and cereal (made with soy protein instead of flour). Like others at the store, she said she did not think she needed to lose weight. Still, she said, "I think there's some truth to not grabbing carbs. I feel more energy when I eat low-carb.

"I've been eating healthy for a long time, but when you get home from work, the things you grab are all carbs," she said. "The easiest thing is to grab a bagel. If they can make it easy to grab one that's low-carb, it's more convenient."

What it means to be low-carb is not clear, though.

The only nutritional claims that the Food and Drug Administration allow on food labels are "low-fat," "low-calorie" and "low-cholesterol," each of which has a legal definition. Technically, any label that says "low-carb" on it is violating the law, but companies will receive little more than a warning letter.

The food and drug agency has postponed issuing regulations on most low-carbohydrate products.

Carbohydrates are reduced by substituting soy flour or other high-fiber flour for refined flour, and various artificial sweeteners for sugar and other sweeteners. If a product contains 15 grams of carbohydrates and 8 grams of fiber, which is not digested, the "net carbs" would be 7 grams.

While companies like Subway and T.G.I. Friday's have allied themselves with specific diets, Unilever and others have pitched their products more generically as low-carb to appeal to nondieters as well.

"We wouldn't be putting this kind of money into this if we thought it was just a trend," said Brad Saltzman, the co-founder of Pure Foods, the low-carb chain opening in California. "People know the number of carbs they're eating like they know their Social Security number or their home telephone number."

Some low-carb devotees say they wonder if there is a market for processed low-carb foods. Nina Reed, an elementary school teacher in Queens, said she preferred to get her carbs from foods like meat, poultry and vegetables. "Whether it's low-carb or low-fat or sugar-free, if you eat three pieces, cake is still cake," she said.

But all the new products seem to be making it easier to attract converts. Clair and Marty Lipson drove from Palm Springs to Pure Foods in Santa Monica after finding out about the market on the Web. The couple tried Atkins a few months ago, but fell off because of the restrictions on what they could eat.

"None of this was really available," Ms. Lipson said. "The amount of stuff that's available now, it's amazing," she said, poring over pancake mixes, pasta and chocolate bars. Asking for "something like rice," she was directed to a row of canned low-carb mashed potatoes in a variety of flavors. "Garlic parmesan?" she asked her husband. "You like garlic parmesan?"

The price: $6.99 for seven ounces.

No one is claiming that eating low-carb is cheap. Robert Hall, 30, was buying nacho cheese and cool ranch twists by CarbFit, some baked cheese, low-carb soft tacos made by a company called Adios Carbs, and, for his girlfriend, low-carb brownies. He left with $122.18 in low-carb food. "I spent 300 bucks last time," he said. "This was just a supplemental visit."

And then there's the question of how low the carbs are. The New York Times had a laboratory analyze seven products and found label information about their carbohydrate levels was accurate. But KCBS-TV in Los Angeles found carbohydrate levels higher than listed in meals at three chain restaurants, including T.G.I. Friday's New York strip with blue cheese. The strip steak had 20 grams of total carbohydrates according to KCBS and 11 according to Friday's. In a statement, Friday's stood by its figures and attributed the discrepancy to human error at the restaurant used by the television station.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: atkins; diet; health; lowcarb

1 posted on 02/18/2004 10:22:47 PM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Weight-watchers point system is the only diet I have ever seen which enables people to lose weight and keep it off. I have a friend who lost so much weight on that diet that weight watchers wouldn't weigh her anymore, you get to a certain point (hah, no pun!) and then they don't want to be enabling anorexics.

Way to much spelling for me in that last paragraph!
2 posted on 02/18/2004 10:27:01 PM PST by jocon307 (The dems don't get it, the American people do.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Illegitimi Non Carborundum
3 posted on 02/18/2004 10:29:59 PM PST by sourcery (This is your country. This is your country under socialism. Any questions? Just say no to Socialism!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
They will have to pry the Rigatoni from my cold, dead fingers. Being Italian, a low-carb diet just ain't gonna happen!
4 posted on 02/18/2004 10:31:29 PM PST by Azzurri
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To: sourcery
Stilwell used it as his motto in World War II. Carborundum is a trademark for silicon carbide, a leading commercial grinding substance...In politics, the motto was popularized by 1964 Republican nominee Senator Barry Goldwater, who hung the sign in his office."

What the ...?

5 posted on 02/18/2004 10:36:55 PM PST by Balata
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To: Azzurri
The best thing that ever happened to me was type 2 diabetes. By eating to keep my blood sugar in the nineties for the last 6 months, I have lost over 40 lbs. Testing it every day keeps you on track. (of course this means low carb)
6 posted on 02/18/2004 10:37:31 PM PST by babygene (Viable after 87 trimesters)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife; carlo3b
Bump for eating the Atkins way.
7 posted on 02/18/2004 10:48:23 PM PST by TruthNtegrity (I refuse to call candidates for President "Democratic" as they are NOT. Socialists, actually.))
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To: Balata
It's a pun--in the same spirit as "carbo diem."
8 posted on 02/18/2004 11:23:08 PM PST by sourcery (This is your country. This is your country under socialism. Any questions? Just say no to Socialism!)
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To: Azzurri
Pasta Fights Back Amid Low-Carb Trend

By TOM RACHMAN
Associated Press Writer
http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/F/FIT_PASTA_FIGHTS_BACK?SITE=FLPET&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

ROME (AP) -- At a recent point in dining history, pasta perception spun around like spaghetti on a fork. Suddenly, noodles transformed from the diner's saucy delight to carb villains bound for the hips, buttocks and belly.

America's battle against pudginess - inspired of late by the low-carb ethics of the Atkins, Zone and South Beach diets - has trashed pasta. But defenders of macaroni and its floppy kin rebelled in Rome this week at a conference promoted as "Pasta Fights Back."

Their weapons at the three-day meeting that ended Wednesday were science, lectures and delectable plates of pasta handed out free to attendees. Another popular dish was denunciation of the latest American diet trend.

"How is it that it can be called a low-carb diet when in fact it is a dangerous high-fat diet? How can that happen in our culture?" railed K. Dun Gifford, president of the Oldways Preservation Trust, the Boston-based food issues think tank that organized the event.

One impassioned speaker called for a swift death to the Atkins Diet. Another skeptically cited 28 eating fads of recent years, among them the Caveman Diet, the Sex Diet and the Russian Air Force Diet. A third speaker recalled Sophia Loren's remark: "Everything you see, I owe to pasta."

The conference, officially titled "Healthy Pasta Meals," included numerous eminent scientists and was sponsored by Italian government ministries, pasta giant Barilla and the makers of Parmesan cheese, among others.

The executive chef of New York's Union Square Cafe, Michael Romano, flew in to cook. Prepping vegetables at the luxury hotel where the conference was held, Romano worried about the way Americans eat ... and eat.

"People want to eat from the time they get up till the time they go to sleep. And by the way, no exercise, please," Romano said. "It's all about proportion, it's all about balance."

The conference offered multi-course lunches - wetted with appropriate Italian wines, of course - featuring pasta specialties from all over Italy. A gala dinner, titled "The Glorious Healthy Pasta Meal," included spaghetti with tomatoes and air-dried tuna, flaked Parmesan drizzled with balsamic vinegar, lentil soup with scampi, and roast lamb with fava beans and egg lemon sauce.

Oldways argues that eating must be balanced - not overloaded with fat and protein, nor heavy with carbohydrates. The Mediterranean diet, including fish, fruit, vegetables, breads, rice and pasta, is promoted above all.

Pasta, Oldways says, is an ideal delivery system for healthy ingredients: The carbs in high-quality pasta made from durum wheat are converted slowly into glucose, which has the benefit of more stable insulin levels, and keeps the eater feeling full longer.

John Foreyt, a professor at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, noted that Italians have enjoyed the health benefits of pasta for over 1,000 years.

"Pasta has been wrongly injected into the good carb/bad carb debate, and we want to dispel the notion that it should be avoided," he said in the conference's closing statement.

Conference organizers acknowledge that low-carb, high-fat diets do produce short-term weight loss, but fear they could also increase the long-term risk of grave illnesses such as cancers and heart disease.

Evidence of this is hotly debated in scientific circles. Research suggests people have the best chance of avoiding heart disease, high blood pressure and cancer if they eat a varied diet with plenty of fruits, vegetables and grains.

Whatever the debate, no one can deny the low-carb diets' success.

Many dieters have enjoyed considerable weight loss through regimens that are heavy in meat, cheese and eggs and ultralight in carbs. Millions of Americans are on some form of these diets, and restaurants and food manufacturers are scrambling to offer low-carb products.

And recent studies showed these diets have success over short periods without serious health consequences.

Colette Heimowitz, the Atkins organization's research director, denied that the Atkins Diet is risky or a fad. "It's amazing how Atkins is blamed for everything," she said by phone from New York.

"If people could have moderation in everything that'd be wonderful," Heimowitz said. "We wouldn't have this discussion. But people won't, they don't, they can't. They need other options to reach their weight goals."

At the Rome conference, a little mournfulness was stirred in with dietary advice.

Cookbook writer Susan Herrmann Loomis expressed sadness about the U.S. attitude toward eating.

"Americans come with this enormous fear of what is on their plates, and it translates into fad diets," she said. "Unfortunately, that rarely has to do with just enjoying the heck out of what you're doing."
9 posted on 02/19/2004 12:21:03 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: sourcery
LOL- thanks for that. It's now on my office whiteboard.
10 posted on 02/19/2004 5:00:49 AM PST by Lil'freeper (By all that we hold dear on this good Earth I bid you stand, men of the West!)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Interesting article.
11 posted on 02/19/2004 5:04:27 AM PST by Focault's Pendulum (The Sixties song/mantra....Where Have All The Flowers Gone?.....low carb dieters living large.)
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Wonderful article. Calories is calories.
12 posted on 02/19/2004 6:05:09 AM PST by Explorer89 (No potato pierogies on Atkins? Count me out!)
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To: Explorer89
I went on the South Beach Diet not only to lose weight but it is also heart healthy.
But the point is that all of these "low carb products" as the article stated, are not regulated yet so are they really low carb?

Best to just stick to the diet and cut out white bread, sugar and pasta. Eat more vegies, cheese and egg beaters.
A lot of the low carb products like cake and chips tasted like sawdust.

13 posted on 02/19/2004 6:37:51 AM PST by stopem
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To: TruthNtegrity
Atkins should be credited with making life so much easier for diabetics, in addition to having the best diet plan.
14 posted on 02/19/2004 7:11:38 AM PST by DannyTN
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