Food Label Read
Food labels are something you will have to pay attention to
when you go shopping. Manufacturers of foods in North America
are required to provide accurate information about their food
products. You can find this information on food labels, and
most food labels today are made to be easy-to-read. There are
several elements to a food label:
- Identification. The front of the food
label read it and it likely tell you the brand of the
product and what the product is.
- Information about the Manufacturer.
Most food packages will tell you where a food was made, who
imported it (if the food was imported) and how you can
contact the manufacturer or importer. This information can
be useful if you want to contact someone about the exact
food value content of a product or if you a question or
compliant about the food.
- Codes. Most food packages contain
codes and numbers that contain information about where the
product was made and when. Often, expiry dates are listed
somewhere among these numbers. It is a good practice to
glance at expiry dates of your food to make sure that you
are getting fresh food products.
- Logos, Advertisements, and Claims.
Many foods will have logos or claims on the front of the
label or food package. These may contain terms such as
"light," "the best," "healthy," "natural," and others.
These will likely catch your attention when you are looking
for heart-healthy choices. However, you should never take
this information at face value. Treat these claims as
advertisements rather than as facts. Many foods that claim
to be "low-cholesterol" are full of saturated fats that are
terrible for your cholesterol level. Many foods that claim
to be "low fat" still have plenty of fat or have small
portion sizes.
- Ingredients. This is where the
information starts to get really useful. Almost all
packaged products have lists of ingredients used in the
making of the product. To know how really healthy a food
is, you should start here. Ingredients are listed in order
of amount. That means that if a label reads "peanut butter,
sugar, chocolate solids", the product contains mostly
peanut butter, with less sugar than peanut butter, and less
chocolate solids than sugar. Ingredients listed in brackets
are ingredients that are part of something else or contain
more information about an ingredient.
For example, if an ingredients list reads "vitamins
(thiamin hydrochloride, niacinamide, folic acid)", then the
vitamins in the food consist of thiamin hydrochloride,
niacinamide, folic acid. When shopping to lower your
cholesterol, always read the ingredients list. Look for
foods that contain healthy foods first on the ingredient
list (meaning that there are more of these foods) and foods
that have ingredient lists that contain few saturated
fats.
- Nutrition Facts. This is where you
need to turn your eyes every time you pick up a food you
may want to eat. Even if you can’t read half the
ingredients on the ingredient list, even if you are not
sure what you are looking for, this is the section of the
food label that can help you separate claims from
facts.
Food labels in North America now contain a
simplified section of information about the food. This is
often found on the side of the box or the back of a food
package. This part of the label lists portion sizes, the
percent or amount of fats, vitamins and other nutrients the
food provides, and the amounts of fats and calories the
food contains. This is information you can use. Each time
that you pick up a food, look at the label. Check the
portion size, the amount of fats and the types of fats in
the food.
The amount of saturated and trans fats should
be very small and the portion size should be large. For
example, consider a serving of cream. For a 15 ml serving
(one tablespoon) the cream has 1 gram of saturated fats.
While the amount of fat is small, the serving is small,
too, meaning that the product is actually 8% fat. Soy milk,
a much better alternative, has 1 gram of saturated fat in a
two cup serving, making it much lower in saturated fat.
When making healthy choices, check this part of every food
level for the following:
- Serving Size: This will
tell you whether a food is really healthy or whether it
just appears so due to a very tiny portion
size.
- Fat/Lipid: Look at the
gram amounts of trans and saturated fats. The lower the
better. The lower the overall amount of fat, the
better.
- Sodium: Look for foods
that contain as little as possible.
- Calories: Choosing
lower-calorie foods is better for your heart, your
cholesterol level, and your overall health.
- Fiber: Foods high in
fibre are good for your health and cholesterol
level.
- Cholesterol: Foods that
are lower in dietary cholesterol.
- Percentage: The right
hand side of many labels will tell you what percentage
of the "recommended daily value" the food represents.
For example, a product may claim to provide 30% of a
day’s recommended daily value of iron. This means that
one serving size of the food will give 30% of the fiber
you need all day. When shopping for foods, make sure to
choose foods that have the lowest percentages for
values such as sodium, cholesterol, and fats, and
moderate percentages for values such as fiber. This
will help ensure that you are making heart-healthy
choices.
You may notice that a number of foods do not
contain food labels at all. Foods sold in bulk, fresh produce,
homemade foods (foods sold at bake sales or at farmer’s stands)
and prepared foods in restaurants and cafeterias do not have
these labels.
In the case of fresh produce and some bulk foods
(dried legumes, lentils, spices) this does not always matter,
as you generally know that these foods are healthy and contain
no fats, cholesterol, or other harmful elements. On the other
hand, no food labels are a good reason to avoid restaurant and
take-out meals, as you have no control or choice over how much
food you are eating.
If you really want to know how many fats, sodium,
fiber, and cholesterol you are eating in foods that come with
no label you may want to invest in food guides that estimate
how much fat, calories, and other components are in the more
common food products.
Some restaurants have even begun to offer
ingredient lists and food value information about their meals,
but this information is not always easy to find - it is
sometimes posted in the kitchen or on the restaurant web page.
In the future, it is possible that more restaurants will offer
patrons this information so that diners can make make more
informed decisions about what they eat.
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