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Pastimes : Atkins Diet.....

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To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (887)5/6/2007 7:38:05 AM
From: Alex  Read Replies (1) of 914
 
That morning cereal’s sweeter than you think

By JON UNGOED-THOMAS and MOHAMMED KHAN The Sunday Times
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Food companies have doubled the amount of sugar they add to some of their most popular products including soups and cereals in an attempt to attract sweet-toothed customers.

Some of the biggest increases in sugar have been in breakfast cereals, and even whole wheat bread has become far sweeter. It now routinely contains nearly a teaspoonful of sugar in every three slices.

Experts warn that the trend, which can be traced back over three decades, is likely to get worse as sugar prices fall and salt levels are reduced by health watchdogs.

In 1978, Kellogg’s Special K had 9.6 grams of sugar per 100 grams, but this has now nearly doubled to 17 grams about the same level as vanilla ice cream.

Soaring consumption of sugar has been blamed for high levels of tooth decay and increases in diabetes. Many scientists have implicated it in rising rates of obesity.

Ian Tokelove, a spokesman for the Food Commission in the United Kingdom, which campaigns for healthier foods, said: "Most of us are eating too much sugar, but we are being swamped with it in our food.

""We naturally have a sweet tooth and manufacturers have been quick to use that to try to increase sales in a crowded marketplace. It’s cheap to use and it’s been one of the first things to be added when companies want to make a product a bit different.""

Food companies maintain that sugar forms a useful part of a balanced diet, but an article in the British Medical Journal in 2005 warned: "Sugar is as dangerous as tobacco and, in terms of world health, far more important."

The Food Standards Agency (FSA), which launched a crackdown on salt two years ago, wants companies to reduce the amount of added sugar in food products and is even considering imposing legal limits.

The Sunday Times discovered the increases in sugar levels by analyzing data in an industry handbook on the nutritional value of foods McCance and Widdowson’s The Composition of Foods, which has editions covering 1978 to 2002.

The 1978 edition shows that cans of tomato soup contained on average 2.6 grams of sugar per 100 grams in 1978. By contrast, many soups today have double that amount. A can of Waitrose tomato soup on sale last week had 6.4 grams of sugar per 100 grams, with almost three spoonfuls of sugar in every bowl.

The amount of sugar in a typical loaf of whole wheat bread rose from 2.1 grams per 100 grams in 1978 to 2.8 grams per 100 grams in 2002. A loaf of Hovis whole wheat bread now has 3.7 grams of sugar per 100 grams while Sainsbury’s whole wheat bread has 3.5 grams per 100 grams.

Kellogg’s has increased the sugar content in some of its

bestselling cereals. Cornflakes now have eight grams of sugar per 100 grams compared with 7.4 grams in 1978; All-Bran has 17 grams compared with 15.4 grams in 1978, and Rice Krispies have 10 grams of sugar, up one gram since 1978.

Much of the extra sugar in the modern diet is blamed on pro-cessed foods. A study by Which? released earlier this month found Asda sticky chilli chicken contained 19.2 grams of sugar per 100 grams and Tesco crispy beef with sweet chilli sauce had 23.1 grams per 100 grams.

Jack Winkler, professor of nutrition policy at London Metropolitan University, said that despite government efforts to reduce sugar in the modern diet, it was likely to increase because European Union trade reforms were reducing its price.

""It’s hard to think of a more irresponsible policy than cutting the price of sugar in the middle of an obesity epidemic. It means manufacturers will be putting more of it in their products, not less,"" he said.

It is not just manufactured foods that have seen their sugar content rise. Supermarkets have also been selecting sweeter varieties of fruit and vegetables to appeal to customers.

According to McCance and Widdowson, between 1978 and 2002 the amount of sugar in a banana rose from 16.2 grams per 100 grams to 20.9 grams; the quantity in a pear rose from 7.6 grams per 100 grams to 10 grams; the content for carrots rose from 5.4 grams per 100 grams to 7.4 grams.

Waitrose said its tomato soup was one of a number of products being reformulated with lower amounts of added sugar.

Jenny Walton, a nutritionist for Kellogg’s, said some of its cereals had been made with extra sugar because other ingredients, such as salt, had been reduced.
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