It is
important that you know how to
shop for quality foods. This
section explains how to maximize
your trips to the grocery store
by revealing exactly how to read
labels and find healthy foods.
It is not very complicated, but
a little knowledge can go a long
ways when it comes to healthy
shopping.
Here Are A Few
General Guidelines For Looking At
Food Labels:
-
It is the
ingredients and the nutrition
facts that are important - one
without the other doesn't tell
the full tale.
-
Ingredients
list are listing in descending
order of predominance. This
means that the first ingredient
is the most prevalent in the
product, while the last
ingredient has the least amount
in the product.
-
In general,
you'll want sugars and salts to
be listed last in the
ingredients list
-
If you are
looking for a whole fat food,
remember that the labels list
fats in grams. The percentage
listed next to the fats is
percentage of daily intake, not
percentage of fat calories in
the product. You need to look at
the top of the label, "calories
of fat", and divide that by
total calories to figure out the
percentage. You can estimate
this - if the fat calories are
around ½ of the total calories,
then the fat calories are about
50%.
-
When looking
for carbohydrate products, try
to choose products that are the
least amount processed. Here
are a few tips:
-
Breads should have the
words "whole" or "stone
ground" first on the
ingredients list. Often, you
might see "unbleached
enriched flour, whole
wheat..." which is not the
bread you are looking for -
this is processed bread with
some whole grains added for
color. The first ingredient
should be whole grains.
-
A quality
carbohydrate should have
fiber and sugar. Try to
avoid carbohydrates with
zero fiber. Carbohydrates
that are nothing but fiber
will also not provide
optimal nourishment- a
combination of both is good.
I typically look for at
least 1/6 of the total
carbohydrate count as fiber
- so something with 20 grams
of carbohydrate would have
around 3 - 4 grams of fiber.
-
It is
your decision whether or not
you wish to consume highly
processed foods. I choose to
look for whole, natural
foods. If there is too much
Latin on the label - i.e.
Ingredients I can't
pronounce or don't
recognize, I leave it on the
shelf!
-
Canned goods,
frozen dinners, and other
pre-packaged items are typically
very high in sodium. You are
better off purchasing the whole,
individual ingredients and then
making your own meals from
recipes. You can store these in
containers and freeze them for
later.
i.
Shuffling Ingredients
Foods are often
"grouped" on ingredients lists to
present the items in a specific way.
Sometimes this is for legitimate
reasons, and sometimes it can be
downright tricky. Most people
understand that ingredients should
be listed in descending order of
quantity - in other words, the
ingredient that occurs the most in
the product should also be listed
first. Therefore, someone looking
for a protein bar will be happy to
pick up something that reads:
super-di-awesome Protein blend
(hydrolyzed cow toes, whey),
maltodextrin
The label will list protein, and
zero sugars.
Of course, there is more going on
here. That special protein blend -
what is it, really? Let's say our
ingredients list had 10 grams of
whey, 11 grams of cow toes (ew!) and
12 grams of maltodextrin. That list
would need to be in descending order
of quantity, or "maltodextrin,
hydrolyzed cow toes, whey."
Anyone familiar with sugars knows
that while maltodextrin doesn't
affect the sugar count, it is very
high glycemic and therefore not
something you would want to be the
primary ingredient (unless this was
a post-workout shake). So looking at
this label, the average consumer
would say to themselves, "High in
sugar, tons of poor protein, and
only a little whey."
So what to do? Simple. The company
groups the cow toes and whey
together. This is the "super-di-awesome
protein blend." Because the sum of
the ingredients is 10 + 11 = 21,
this new "blend" can be listed
before the maltodextrin, with the
components of the blend listed in
order.
Now, it appears to the unsuspecting
consumer that there is actually more
whey in the product than
maltodextrin (sugar). But we know
there is less! The whey makes its
way (pardon the pun) to the front of
the list through the use of the
blend. Therefore, when you are
checking out labels, make sure you
are aware of how this grouping
works.
ii.
Special Statements
Sometimes label
contain special statements. It is
important to understand exactly what
these mean.
When a label states, "Not a
significant source of calories from
fat," it must have less than 0.5
grams of fat per serving. Be
cautious of deli meats that are
sliced so thin that they may have
less than ½ gram of fat per serving,
but still contain a significant
percentage of calories from fat.
"Not a significant source of sugars"
means that the sugar count on the
label is less than one gram. Don't
take this statement for granted.
Some ingredients, such as
maltodextrin, are not technically
considered to be sugars, but have
the same effect as sugars. This is
why the ingredients list and the
nutrition facts are important when
taken together.
Here are some definitions for other
special statements:
-
No Fat Or
Fat Free - Contains less
than a 1/2 gram of fat per
serving.
-
Lower Or
Reduced Fat - Contains less
the fat or calories of the
original version or a similar
product.
-
Low Fat
- Contains less than 3 grams of
fat per serving.
-
Lite -
Contains 1/3 the calories or 1/2
the fat per serving of the
original version or a similar
product.
-
Low
Calories - Contains 1/3 the
calories of the original version
or a similar product.
-
No Calorie
Or Calorie Free - Contains
less than 5 calories per
serving.
-
Sugar Free
- Contains less than 1/2 gram of
sugar per serving.
-
No
Preservatives - Contains no
preservatives (chemical or
natural).
-
No
Preservatives Added -
Contains no added chemicals to
preserve the product. Some of
these products may contain
natural preservatives.
-
Low Sodium
- Contains less than 140
milligrams of sodium per
serving.
-
No Salt Or
Salt Free - Contains less
than 5 milligrams of sodium per
serving.
-
Baked Not
Fried - Used mostly for
potato chips, crackers or corn
chips, this label means the
product is usually sprayed with
a light oil then baked in an
over instead of fried in the
oil.
iii.
Sugars by Any Name
Understand how to
locate sugars in your foods. I am
not against sugars, as you read in
previous chapters, but it is
important to know how to find these
if they do exist. Here are some
common names for sugars. Be cautious
with foods where these appear higher
in the ingredients list, as the
foods may contain too much sugar and
create undesirable spikes in your
blood sugar:
Cane juice
Custard powder
Falernum
Fructose
Glucose
Honey
Jaggery
Jus de canne
Lactose
Levulose
Malt
Maltodextrin
Maltose
Marshmallow
Misri
Molasses
Orgeat
Panocha
Sorghum
Sucrose
Sugar
Treacle
Turbinado
Zuckerhut
iv.
Dairy Derivatives
If you are
avoiding dairy, the following
elements on an ingredients list are
dairy or dairy derivatives:
Cream
Cheese
Butter
Yogurt
Koumiss
Kefir
Ghee
Paneer
Lactose
Casein
Whey
Rennet
Rennin
v.
Natural & Artificial
There seems to be
a lot of fuss over having natural
versus artificial flavorings. It
seems that many products are proud
to brag "natural flavors" on their
ingredients, while consumers are
quick to erect a stake and start
building a pile of sticks to burn
anything that remotely mentions
something as "artificial." The truth
about these ingredients, however, is
not what you think! So what exactly
is the difference between natural
and artificial flavors?
Natural and artificial flavors are
defined by the Code of Federal
Regulations. This means there are
specific laws regarding which of
these terms can be used on an
ingredients list.
In order to be considered "natural"
an ingredient must adhere to the
standard that:
"a natural flavor is the
essential oil, oleoresin, essence or
extractive, protein hydrolysate,
distillate, or any product of
roasting, heating or enzymolysis,
which contains the flavoring
constituents derived from a spice,
fruit or fruit juice, vegetable or
vegetable juice, edible yeast, herb,
bark, bud, root, leaf or similar
plant material, meat, seafood,
poultry, eggs, dairy products, or
fermentation products thereof, whose
significant function in food is
flavoring rather than nutritional."
Anything that does not follow this
definition is considered artificial.
Quite a mouthful, no?
There is actually a trained
professional, known as a "flavorist,"
who creates these ingredients. What
may surprise you is that both
natural and artificial flavors are
made in a laboratory! That's right -
the flavorist actually uses the same
chemicals to make natural or
artificial flavors.
The difference is that the chemicals
are either naturally derived or
synthetically created. This is not
like the difference between wool and
nylon, which are both used for
making clothes but are different
substances.
At a molecular level, natural and
artificial flavors appear to be the
same. In fact, there is an argument
that artificial flavors are safer.
This is because they can be created
in their pure form. For natural
flavors, the source product (for
example, an apple) must be dissolved
and filtered, even treated with
other chemicals, in order to yield
the chemicals for the flavoring.
This creates a greater potential for
impurities to exist in the
flavoring.
It is therefore wise to note that
natural and artificial flavorings
are both chemical additives used to
enhance flavor. If a product
indicates that it contains a natural
flavor, that does not mean the
vendor ground their apples to flavor
the product - it means they
purchased or extracted a specific
set of chemicals and artificially
added these to the food to alter the
taste.
If you are not concerned with
flavorings, then pay less attention
to whether the source is natural or
artificial, and more attention to
the position in the ingredients
list. If you want a natural food in
the sense that it is something you
could produce in your own kitchen,
ditch the packages that have any
added flavoring other than natural
spices.
vi. Red
Flags
There are certain
red flags to look for in an
ingredients list. This is by no
means a comprehensive list, but a
recommendation based on my own
experience with purchasing quality
foods. When looking at an
ingredients list, examine the
beginning (initial ingredients), the
middle, and the end of the list.
Here Is My List Of Red Flags:
-
Sugar
anywhere but the end. Middle is
fine if there is also
substantial fiber. Of course,
these rules may change for a
post-workout shake.
-
Salt anywhere
but the end of the list. Salt is
not bad (see my "The Skinny on
Salt" article) but should be
used in moderation
-
Any
ingredient that I can't
pronounce or must understand
Latin in order to decipher -
again, these aren't necessarily
bad I just ask myself do they do
something good for me?
-
Excess
vitamins and minerals - I'd
rather get these from whole
foods and a well-designed
multivitamin than as a spray or
additive in my food
-
Enriched
anything. This has to be the
biggest joke in the food
industry. Enriched means the
food was stripped of vital
nutrients, and then a half-baked
attempt at stuffing some more
back in was made
-
Fortified.
Fortified with what? Control
your vitamin and mineral intake
through engineered supplements
and whole foods - not through
additives to existing foods
where you do not have control
over the quality or quantity
-
Any food
where the serving size provides
over 20 grams of carbohydrate
but less than 2 grams of fiber
-
A protein
where the fat calories are half
of or more than the total
calories (unless, of course, you
are looking at a bottle of olive
oil)
-
The existence
of partially hydrogenated oils
anywhere in the ingredients list
(also known as trans-fatty
acids). I also tend to avoid
hydrogenated oils as well (as
opposed to partially
hydrogenated) but don't mind
them if they are at the end of
the ingredients list. Also, if a
product declares that it is free
of trans fatty acids, then it
should be fine despite the
presence of hydrogenated oils in
the ingredients list.
Educate yourself
regarding foods will help you
tremendously in your journey to
fitness. As with all things,
practice moderation. For example, my
weakness is fried corn chips.
I still consume these, in
moderation, by keeping them within
my calorie budget and avoiding
multiple servings per day or
consuming them daily. When I have a
strong craving for chips, I will
purchase the baked variety (usually
spiced with lemon and chili pepper)
as a compromise.
Conclusion
I
want to leave you with one final
piece of advice that I learned from
many other sources. It is called
"shopping at the periphery."
If you notice, most stores put the
processed, packaged, and canned
goods in the middle of the store.
The fresh produce, eggs, dairy,
meats, and other whole items are
around the perimeter of the store.
As long as you focus the majority of
your shopping on this perimeter, you
will be doing very well at picking
up healthy, wholesome foods.
Check out my
Lose Fat Not Faith program where
I walk you through the journey of
transforming your mind and body to
achieve the results you never
thought were possible