The Sugar-coated
Truth
by Jeremy Likness
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. |
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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?
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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 eBook, Become
the Journey: A Transformation Guide. Learn
more by clicking
here.
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