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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
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original link: http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/chi-h...0,7627724.story

Natural sugar versus high-fructose corn syrup

Scientists see little dietary benefit in food companies' scramble to swap out processed sweeteners for natural ones

By Steve Mills | Tribune reporter

June 25, 2009

The bright red label on a bottle of Ocean Spray cranberry juice cocktail boasts that it contains no high-fructose corn syrup. Its sweet replacement: sugar.

Other juice producers also have replaced the sweetener with cane or beet sugar. Big-name products including Log Cabin syrup, some Kraft Foods dressings and certain Pepsi products have gone the same route. Starbucks has undertaken a switch from high-fructose corn syrup to sugar in its bakery goods.

The turnabout is another step in the ongoing demonization of high-fructose corn syrup, a potent symbol of processed food's many evils. Since use of the sweetener exploded in the 1980s, it has been derided as unnatural and lacking any meaningful nutritional value, often mentioned in the same breath as such food villains as trans fats and artificial dyes.

First Lady Michelle Obama recently added to the criticism by saying she will not serve food made with high-fructose corn syrup to her two young daughters.

The beneficiary of this demonization has been sugar -- which some consumers have come to view almost as a health food. But most scientists and nutritionists agree sugar is no better than high-fructose corn syrup for a healthy diet.

Many consumers see sugar as more natural, because making high-fructose corn syrup involves using enzymes in a complex series of chemical reactions. Environmentalists are concerned that depending on corn for sweeteners depletes the soil quality on land where it is farmed. Researchers have reported detecting traces of mercury in a small sampling of high-fructose corn syrup, though they cautioned that the study was limited.

Some consumers say foods made with sugar simply taste better.

Those issues have come to outweigh high-fructose corn syrup's benefits -- it helps keep foods moist, extends the shelf life of products and is cheaper to produce than cane or beet sugar. Consequently, it has become a popular ingredient in processed products in nearly every aisle of the supermarket.

The fact is that high-fructose corn syrup and sugar both contribute to increased risks of obesity, diabetes, heart disease and other illnesses, according to the American Medical Association and numerous scientists and nutritionists. Although some studies have suggested the body metabolizes high-fructose corn syrup more slowly than it does sugar, experts say the bottom line for consumers is they should avoid both except in small amounts.

Walter Willett, chairman of the nutrition department at Harvard University's School of Public Health and author of "Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy," called the recent spate of product reformulations away from high-fructose corn syrup a "marketing distraction."

Ocean Spray Cranberries Inc. Chief Operating Officer Ken Romanzi did not disagree. Even though there is no proof that high-fructose corn syrup is more harmful than sugar, Romanzi said the maker of juices and other products "didn't want any negative implication that there was something bad for people in our Ocean Spray products."

The company decided two years ago to switch; the move was completed last fall.

"The problem," Romanzi said, "is that perception is reality in the minds of consumers."

Similarly, Pinnacle Foods Group said it was responding to consumers when it replaced high-fructose corn syrup with sugar in its Log Cabin brand of syrup in April. Andy Reichgut, vice president of marketing for Pinnacle, said consumers prefer "the idea of products that were made with natural sugar. ... They believe that it delivers a cleaner and sweeter taste."

Manufacturers of high-fructose corn syrup say the switch to sugar is the endgame in the long campaign against their sweetener, one largely based on unproven scientific assertions.

"Consumers are being misled into thinking that there's something different about this corn sweetener than any other sweetener, when in fact they're essentially the same," said Audrae Erickson, president of the Corn Refiners Association, a trade group that represents makers of high-fructose corn syrup and other corn millers.

The group, frustrated with continuing attacks on high-fructose corn syrup, launched a media and consumer campaign last summer to "change the conversation" about the product.

"This is not for science. This is not for consumer health," Erickson said of the food manufacturers' switch to sugar. "It is clearly about quarterly earnings in a tight economic environment."

Even the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a not-for-profit health advocacy group in Washington, D.C., said suggestions that high-fructose corn syrup is more harmful nutritionally than sugar is "one of those urban myths that sounds right, but is basically wrong," according to its Web site.

But the group takes issue with claims by the Corn Refiners Association that high-fructose corn syrup is natural. While corn is natural, the Center for Science in the Public Interest said, high-fructose corn syrup "does not occur in nature" and, because it is heavily processed, "should be considered an artificial ingredient."

The Food and Drug Administration does not define the term "natural," a word manufacturers have found useful in attracting health-conscious consumers. But the agency has said, in response to an industry-related inquiry, that high-fructose corn syrup is natural when produced through a particular process.

Ann Titus, an associate creative director at a Chicago advertising firm, said she has turned away from high-fructose corn syrup as she has tried to maintain a healthy diet, and one she believes is more natural. She even gave up one of her favorite drinks -- Snapple raspberry tea -- because it contained the sweetener.

"When I saw it was a main ingredient of raspberry Snapple, I stopped cold. Which was unfortunate, because I really loved raspberry Snapple," Titus said.

As it happens, Snapple has joined the manufacturers that have replaced high-fructose corn syrup with sugar, switching the ingredients in many of its drinks earlier this year. Now its raspberry tea is made with sugar.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

Agreed - I don't want to eat genetically engineered food - period.

I find stuff with HFCS tastes different.......I can't bake properly with Corn Syrup which is HFCS either - it sucks so I brought some 'real Corn Syrup' down from Canada :)

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Posted

I saw that Pepsi and Mountain Dew had started selling "Throw Back" products that were made with Sugar rather than HFCS.

I just keep telling my hubby he's drinking Canadian Pepsi :P:lol:

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
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Posted
I saw that Pepsi and Mountain Dew had started selling "Throw Back" products that were made with Sugar rather than HFCS.

I just keep telling my hubby he's drinking Canadian Pepsi :P:lol:

We tried a few bottles of that but I find it way too sweet - surprise, they over-sweetened it :lol:

Filed: Timeline
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Agreed - I don't want to eat genetically engineered food - period.

I find stuff with HFCS tastes different.......I can't bake properly with Corn Syrup which is HFCS either - it sucks so I brought some 'real Corn Syrup' down from Canada :)

I had to do that too!!!!

We tried a few bottles of that but I find it way too sweet - surprise, they over-sweetened it :lol:

Yeah. That's fantastic that they've stopped using the HFCS, but I sure wish they'd stop with the mass quantities of ANYTHING that makes foods sweet. :dead:

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

I tried it myself and yes, I found it pretty sugary. haha

The more they do away with it in the US, I believe the more ppl will notice a difference here.

"...My hair's mostly wind,

My eyes filled with grit

My skin's white then brown

My lips chapped and split

I've lain on the prairie and heard grasses sigh

I've stared at the vast open bowl of the sky

I've seen all the castles and faces in clouds

My home is the prairie and for that I am proud…

If You're not from the Prairie, you can't know my soul

You don't know our blizzards; you've not fought our cold

You can't know my mind, nor ever my heart

Unless deep within you there's somehow a part…

A part of these things that I've said that I know,

The wind, sky and earth, the storms and the snow.

Best say that you have - and then we'll be one,

For we will have shared that same blazing sun." - David Bouchard

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

The two months i was in chicago i told David.."this doesn't taste right". and i never realized at the time it was from HFCS. There is a difference..i dont care what ppl say lol. even the hershey chcolate syrup tastes completely blah down there.

Maybe now i won't have to search out the kosher stores to find real sugar based products LOL :)

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted

I'm glad they're switching back to sugar but I agree with Krikit - they are adding sweetening to many things where it is not needed - it is all that extra caloric sweetning that causes problems and affects the taste of things as well. I am an inveterate label reader since I need to know the carbohydrate and sugar contents of foods in order to determine how much insulin to inject - it is frightening how many foods that don't require it have HFCS or even sugar added - for example cream and milk - yep some brands add a sweetner of some sort. And why add sugar to fruit juices? They are already sweet enough.

“...Isn't it splendid to think of all the things there are to find out about? It just makes me feel glad to be alive--it's such an interesting world. It wouldn't be half so interesting if we knew all about everything, would it? There'd be no scope for imagination then, would there?”

. Lucy Maude Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables

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