HealthIn focusLifestyleOpinion

Message in a bottle

When I was growing up my mum used to say I was part of the food police at that time it involved scowling at anyone daring to put a tube of smarties in their supermarket trolley when their producer was involved in a scandal regarding baby milk formula in parts of Africa.

Since then, we have even more information about how certain foodstuffs and ‘edible products’ are produced and therefore even more reason to watch what goes into our shopping trollies or cardboard boxes (where I shop now).

Thinking about this week’s blog both the song from The Police in the 1980s and the policing of the shopping trollies came to mind! Most of the bottles, cans, and packets we buy have messages pasted all over them. The most prominent claim ‘low-fat’, ‘no-fat’, ‘50% less fat’ … or ‘reduced sugar’, ‘less-salt’ and ‘high-fibre’…  lots of relative terms – less than what exactly?

We are constantly bombarded with these claims and not much surprise that we don’t know where to look or what to believe in the end.

Much better to get out the glasses (or magnifying glass) and start policing those labels… lets see what’s really hiding in our bottles!

Jam Jars

 

Here are five simple ideas for deciphering the codes:

  1. Usually the shorter the ingredient list, the better … (obvious exceptions if there are lots of spices – see no. 2!)
  2. See if you can pronounce (easily) all the ingredients and if you keep them in your food cupboard. If you wouldn’t know what to do with them then pretty good chance your body doesn’t know either!
  3. Watch out for sugar or anything with ‘–ose ‘ (fructose, glucose) which is too high in the list (top of the list means it is the main ingredient by weight). Blueberry jam, for example, should be full of blueberries, no? 
  4. As far as fats are concerned avoid trans-fats or anything hydrogenated… better with butter or olive oil or anything you would cook with yourself. Trans-fats allow a packet of biscuits to stay unchanged on a supermarket shelf for months on end… great for the company making them – not so great for you!
  5. Don’t worry! Have fun with it and see it as a game… we all have our favourite things that we know are not that great for us, but if most of the time we are enjoying un-processed, unrefined food, our bodies will thank us for it.

Do you have any top tips on label-reading? I would love to hear your thoughts…

Suzy Sumner

Suzy Sumner Certified Integrative Nutrition Health Coach Eating Psychology Coach Health is not the goal - it is the path to help you reach all your goals

Suzy Sumner has 22 posts and counting. See all posts by Suzy Sumner