This article is
about everything
sweet. Learn
about the
history of
sugar, the
difference
between refined
and natural
sugars, and
sugar
alternatives
(artificial
sweeteners).
It is believed that
cane sugar was
discovered before
the birth of Christ.
As early as 500
B.C., India was said
to have a “reed
which gives honey
without bees.” This
reed would later
become known as
sugar cane.
The invasion of
Arabs into India
nearly 1,000 years
later in 642 A.D.
led to the spread of
sugar cane to the
rest of the world.
The Arabs discovered
sugar cane and
learned how it was
processed by the
Indians. They
brought the cane
with them as they
conquered much of
Europe, introducing
it to lands such as
North Africa and
Spain. For many
years, however, the
rest of Europe was
stuck with honey,
because sugar did
not make it to the
west until the
crusades. The first
record of sugar in
England occurs in
the year 1099.
Sugar was brought to
the Americas by
Christopher
Columbus. At the
time, sugar was
processed by boiling
the cane juice and
then harvesting the
crystals left behind
after the water
evaporated. These
crystals contained
protein, fiber,
vitamins, and
minerals. While they
were calorie dense,
they provided
essential nutrients.
It was not until a
few centuries later
that the process of
refining sugars, and
stripping out many
of these nutrients,
was perfected and
sugar became a
profitable industry.
It is interesting to
note that raw sugar
is already refined.
Only evaporated cane
juice is truly “raw”
sugar (of the cane
variety - sugars can
come from other
sources as well,
such as beets and
fruit). Once the
cane juice crystals
are harvested, they
are washed, boiled,
centrifuged,
filtered, and dried.
The purpose of this
is to remove all of
the original plant
materials (stalk,
fiber, etc.) to
produce the pure
sugar. This process
removes most of the
fiber and nutrients
that existed in the
original crystals.
The sugar then
becomes refined, and
is now a food high
in calories with
little nutritional
value.
Several centuries
ago, refined sugars
were expensive to
produce, and were
also taxed at a
higher rate.
Therefore, only the
affluent could
afford them. Refined
goods became a
symbol of status.
People who had
access to these
foods were called
“refined” people.
Interestingly, this
affluent sector of
the population also
had a
disproportionate
rate of disease and
illness as compared
to the lower classes
that only had access
to unrefined,
natural foods. There
appear to be
references to the
evils of sugar as
early as the 1800s
when rations in the
military were
compared to standard
civilian meals and
it was determined
that refined foods
had a potentially
negative impact on
health.
Sugar has received a
bad reputation
lately – not just
refined sugars, but
all sugars. Many
people go out of
their way to avoid
sugar in the diet,
without
understanding how
sugar affects
health. Artificial
sweeteners are a
common substitute
for sugars, but are
these synthetic
chemicals truly
safe? For many
people, sugar-free
and fat-free food is
an artificial
“crutch” - comforted
in the knowledge
that their food
contains no sugar or
fat, they over
consume this “safe”
food. In the end,
sugar may not turn
out to be the enemy
that many people
claim it is.
There are a few
reasons why sugar
has a bad
reputation. For one,
refined sugars
provide easy food
for oral bacteria,
and can promote
cavities and the
accumulation of
plaque. There is
also a prevalent
belief that all
simple carbohydrates
are bad. In reality,
the digestive system
is very complex and
there is more to
consider than just
the number of
molecules chained
together in a food -
one must consider
enzymes, where the
food is processed in
the body, and what
changes take place
to the food before
the body utilizes
it.
All carbohydrates
are technically
sugar. Before your
body will use the
carbohydrate in
table sugar, a baked
potato, or a green
bean, it must break
this carbohydrate
down to glucose, the
form of sugar that
your body can “burn”
for energy. Glucose
is also stored as
glycogen in the
muscle cells. So,
since all
carbohydrates
eventually end up as
a sugar, the mere
fact that they begin
as sugars is
irrelevant. So what
is relevant? The
rate at which the
sugar enters the
bloodstream, which
is exactly what the
glycemic index
measures.
Another concern some
people express is
the “ease” at which
sugars are converted
to fat. I read one
“system” for getting
into shape that did
not offer scientific
evidence, but
claimed that in
working with
extremely lean body
builders, the author
figured out that
sugars cause fat to
be stored quickly
and easily. Other
books simply state
that sugar is
quickly and easily
converted to fat.
Again, we have to
understand our
biological systems
to analyze those
statements. How does
a sugar get stored
as a fat? The liver
processes the
glucose molecule and
turns it into a
triglyceride, or fat
molecule. This,
again, complicates
matters: whether or
not you eat table
sugar or a green
bean, guess what? By
the time your liver
“sees” it, it has
been broken down to
a glucose molecule.
There is no
practical way that
your liver somehow
“knows” that the
glucose molecule
came from a green
bean instead of a
grain of table
sugar, except that
your entire body
benefits from
additional nutrients
when you consume the
green bean.
The only real way
the sugar may be
more readily stored
as fat is if it
impacts blood sugar
or creates some
environment that
would promote the
conversion of
glucose to
triglycerides.
Theoretically, a
huge surge in blood
sugar due to a
rapidly ingested
carbohydrate would
cause the liver to
convert most of that
sugar to fat,
regardless of
whether or not you
required it for
energy.
The glycemic index
demonstrates that
refined sugars are
indeed dangerous -
they have some of
the highest indexes
on the list. Many
manufacturers use a
“complex
carbohydrate” called
maltodextrin to
sweeten shakes. They
can state “no sugar”
or “low sugar” on
the nutrition label
because maltodextrin
is a complex
carbohydrate, but it
will impact blood
sugar more than
table sugar (table
sugar is sucrose,
which, by the way,
is not a simple
sugar - it is two
molecules, glucose
and fructose, bonded
together). How do
natural sugars fare?
Fructose, the type
of sugar commonly
found in fruit;
lactose, the sugar
found in milk; and
honey, the sugar
produced from nectar
by bees, all fare
very well. In fact,
if you are simply
concerned about
blood sugar, these
three sugars will
affect it less than
brown rice, whole
wheat bread, and
baked potatoes!
We’ve determined
that simply avoiding
a sugar because it
is a sugar has no
real scientific
foundation. One
problem with sugars,
however, is that
many products add an
extremely high
amount of sugar to
sweetener the
products. This, in
turn, causes the
product to be higher
in calories. Because
consuming more
calories means you
must expend more
calories to reduce
or manage your
weight, this can be
of concern. The
alternative to using
a natural or refined
sugar is to use a
reduced calorie
sweetener. There are
five major reduced
calorie sweeteners
on the market today.
These are Acesulfame
Potassium (Acesulfame-K),
Aspartame,
Saccharin, Stevia,
and Sucralose. Are
these products the
answer to your woes?
Acesulfame-K
was introduced in
1967. It is 200
times sweeter than
table sugar
(sucrose). According
to studies, this
sweetener is not
absorbed in the body
but passes through
unchanged. How many
studies? Around 90
studies have been
conducted on this
sweetener, with no
documented health
risks. The Center
for Science in the
Public Interest (CSPI),
however, reports
that the product can
break down to
acetoacetamide. This
chemical has been
shown to affect the
thyroid in rats,
rabbits, and dogs.
Administration of 1%
and 5%
acetoacetamide in
the diet for three
months caused benign
thyroid tumors in
rats.
Aspartame was
introduced in 1965.
It is a low-calorie
sweetener that is
also 200 times
sweeter than
sucrose. Aspartame
is made from two
amino acids (the
building blocks of
protein):
L-phenylalanine and
L-aspartic acid.
More than 200
studies have been
performed and the
only documented
health risks are to
people who suffer
from phenylketonuria
(PKU), who cannot
metabolize the
L-phenylalanine.
This is why there is
a PKU warning on any
product that
contains aspartame.
While there are no
conclusive, formal,
documented cases of
adverse health
affects, many people
report headaches
after consuming
products that
contain aspartame.
Other adverse
affects that
consumers have
reported (but have
not been
independently
verified) include
seizures, dizziness,
tremors, migraines,
memory loss,
slurring of speech,
confusion, fatigue,
depression, nausea,
and worse. Because
children lack a
“barrier” of
protection that
prevents the wrong
nutrients from
entering the brain
(which adults have),
some doctors have
recently suggested
that aspartame
should not be given
to children.
Saccharin was
discovered 100 years
ago. It is a low
calorie sweetener.
It is one of the
most studied
ingredients in the
food supply. More
than 30 human
studies have been
conducted with
saccharin, and no
adverse health
effects have been
reported. In 1997, a
study using rodents
reported a rise in
bladder tumors,
although this may be
related to an
increase in sodium
and other products
that were contained
in the experimental
diet. The CSPI
reports several
studies that may
indicate a rise in
tumor activity that
correlates to
saccharin intake.
Stevia is a
plant that
originated in the
rainforests of
Paraguay. It is up
to 300 times sweeter
than sugar, does not
impact blood sugar
and has zero
calories. The leaves
have been used for
over 1,500 years by
the Guarini Indians
of Paraguay. It was
discovered and
introducd to Europe
by M. S. Bertoni in
1899. While Stevia
has since become a
very popular
sweetener because it
is "natural," the
FDA has yet to
approve it as a food
source - it remains
classified as a
dietary supplement.
Sucralose is
a non-caloric
sweetener made from
sugar. It was
discovered in 1976.
A sugar molecule is
modified to replace
a hydroxyl (water)
group with a
chloride (chlorine)
group. This creates
a product on average
600 times sweeter
than table sugar,
which theoretically
will pass through
the body without
being metabolized.
Over 100 studies
have been conducted
using sucralose in
order to approve it
as a food additive.
Are these sweeteners
really worth it?
While there are many
anecdotal reports of
negative side
effects, none of
these have been
confirmed through
scientific
investigation. In
contrast, there is
no anecdotal
evidence whatsoever
linking consumption
of natural sugars
such as fructose,
honey, lactose, etc.
with cancers,
tumors, headaches,
or other problems
other than diabetes.
Many diabetics use
the glycemic index
to control their
food intake, and
virtually many
natural (unrefined)
sugars fall within
acceptable ranges
for consumption
based on those
guidelines.
Do sugar free foods
really help to
control calories? I
know many people who
will avoid sugar
like the plague,
then purchase a box
of sugar-free
brownies and eat the
entire box. What are
they trying to
achieve? Sugar-free
may imply “reduced
calorie” but when
you over consume
reduced calorie
foods, you still
create a problem! Do
sugar-free brownies
fit into a
lifestyle, or are
these a quick fix?
Adding one teaspoon
of natural sugar to
a bowl of oatmeal
will add four grams
of sugar or 16
calories and barely
impact the rate at
which that food is
digested and
released to the
bloodstream
(remember, your
liver won’t know if
the glucose molecule
it is processing
came from the
oatmeal or the
teaspoon of sugar).
Remember the
glycemic load? This
would have a low
load! Adding one
teaspoon of an
artificial sweetener
won’t add any
calories - but will
introduce a new
realm of possible
side effects. On the
other hand, if you
avoid healthy food
choices such as
fruit due to the
sugar content, you
also miss out on
thousands of
vitamins, minerals,
and phytochemicals
that don’t exist in
any tablet or pill
on the market - and
have documented
health benefits
rather than risks!
Oranges can reduce
the risk of stroke.
Bananas promote
heart health by
providing a
tremendous amount of
natural potassium.
The list goes on and
on.
What sugars are
considered natural?
A few natural
sweeteners include:
stevia (a herbal
extract that is
naturally sweet with
no calories), barley
malt, evaporated
cane juice before it
is refined (refined
sugar is derived
from cane juice, but
is extremely
processed with many
of the natural
enzymes, vitamins,
minerals, and fiber
removed), fruit
juice (fructose),
rice syrup, honey,
and sugar alcohols.
All-natural maple
syrup is not only
flavorful, but rich
with iron and other
micronutrients.
Sugar alcohols have
a “sweet” taste but
are processed by the
body as alcohol.
This means that they
are typically burned
for energy and have
a minimal impact on
insulin and blood
sugar, according to
the latest studies.
They are not known
to be toxic like
non-sugar alcohols.
I also recommend a
product called
Sucanat® that
contains sugar cane
molasses.
There is some
confusion about what
high fructose corn
syrup (HFCS)
actually is. You
will find that the
majority of
processed foods
contain this as a
main ingredient. It
is difficult to find
bread in the
supermarket that
isn’t made with HFCS,
and most sodas,
treats, and
non-natural juices
contain this as
well. HFCS is much
sweeter than table
sugar, which is one
reason for its
popularity in the
food industry. HFCS
can be misleading to
consumers who are
aware of natural
sugars and the
glycemic index.
Knowing that
fructose is a
natural fruit sugar
and low on the
glycemic index, they
may assume the HFCS
falls under the same
category. HFCS is
actually hydrolyzed
cornstarch, which
means that
cornstarch is mixed
with enzymes and
broken down. A
chemical in the
cornstarch converts
some of the sugar in
glucose form to
fructose. The end
result only contains
14% fructose - the
rest is dextrose and
other sugars and
carbohydrates (so it
is hardly “high”
fructose, it is only
“higher” in fructose
than other corn
products). HFCS has
a glycemic index of
89, which is only
slightly less than
that of table sugar
(92). In contrast,
milk sugar (lactose)
is 65 and natural
fructose is 32, or
almost 1/3 that of
HFCS.
Sugar is certainly
not your enemy.
Refined and
processed sugars
are! Consume a
protein and a whole,
unprocessed
carbohydrate with
every meal, and add
healthy fats to your
diet. If these meals
happen to contain
some natural honey
or cane juice, don’t
sweat it! Eat 4 - 5
servings of fruit
and or vegetables
each day - there are
far too many healthy
compounds in these
foods to pass them
up out of fear of
the natural sugar
contained within.
Make your own choice
about artificial
sweeteners, but keep
in mind that you can
easily control your
portion sizes and
use natural
sweeteners instead.
Are the potential
risks worth the
small benefit you
may or may not be
receiving from
artificial
sweeteners? Learn to
let sugar work with
you, not against
you!
This article is
an excerpt from my
5 disc CD Set,
Lose Fat Not Faith. Learn
more by
clicking here.