Go to www.wcpo.com Look for "Healthy Living" section in left column.
Read the aticle about how many foods still contain Trans Fats even if the
label says no trans fats and how food manufacturers get away with it.
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May you always have..Love to Share, Health to Spare, and Friends that Care!
Thanks EarlyBird! Here's some foods that we've eaten ourselves, unaware
Quote:
10 Surprising Foods That Contain Trans Fat
Let's start with something you already know... trans fat is bad. In fact, I'd go as far as to say that trans fat should probably be at the top of your list of things to avoid eating. At the very best it would be in second place behind "deadly poison." In case this now common knowledge information is new to you, feel free to learn exactly how bad it is here, here and here.
Now for something many people still don't know (unless of course you've seen me mention it throughout this site about 48 times already). A few years ago, the FDA came up with some hilarious guidelines for food companies to follow when it came to listing the trans fat content of their food in the food's nutrition facts panel. Basically, trans fat content only needs to be listed if the food contains 0.5 grams or more of it per serving.
What that means is, if a food contains 0.49 grams of trans fat in 1 serving, that food will have "Trans Fat: 0 grams" listed in its nutrition facts. This is when the hilarity ensues.
First, few people ever eat 1 serving of anything. So, if someone happened to eat 2 servings of a food that contained 0.49 grams of trans fat per serving, they'd eat just under 1 full gram of trans fat all while thinking they ate "0 grams."
Second, even if just 1 serving was eaten, any trans fat is still too much trans fat. Yes, less than 0.5 grams isn't quite 10 grams, but it's still FAR from fantastic and, over the course of the day, adds up.
Third, many foods mess around with their serving size until they get it to a point where they reach that 0.49 grams of trans fat (or lower) sweet spot for the sole purpose of being allowed to put "0 grams" on their label.
Forth, there are a ton of foods that go out of their way to print something along the lines of "This food contains 0 grams of trans fat! We are super awesome because of this!" in big bold letters right on the front of the package to show off just how "healthy" the food is and to give you further reason to buy and eat it. In reality, however, an insanely large number of the foods doing this do indeed contain some amount of trans fat per serving (less than 0.5 grams of course). So, as if it wasn't bad enough that foods can have "Trans Fat: 0 grams" on their label even though the food actually contains it, many of these foods take it even further by bringing extra attention this fact/lie and turn it into another selling point of the food.
And while you are processing all of this, bare in mind that the American Heart Association recommends that we consume a maximum of 2 grams of trans fat per day. However, they go on to say that there is enough naturally occurring trans fat in some meat and dairy products that most people already reach this maximum 2 grams without the additional consumption of the man-made trans fat found in the types of foods on the list below.
Long story short, people who care about their health should ideally be aiming to consume as close to 0 grams of trans fat per day as they possibly can.
With all of that being said, I thought it would be fun to bring to your attention some of the most surprising foods that, despite what their labels say, actually do contain some amount of trans fat per serving. Here now are 10 of those foods...
#1: Breakfast Cereals
Here's one that will come as no surprise to anyone who has seen the Breakfast Cereal Comparison. Of the 50 popular brand name cereals I looked at, 12 contained trans fat. In no specific order, they are:
Fruity Pebbles (Post)
Cocoa Pebbles (Post)
Basic 4 (General Mills)
Rice Krispies Treats Cereal (Kellogg's)
Froot Loops (Kellogg's)
Oreo O's (Post)
Corn Pops (Kellogg's)
Honey Smacks (Kellogg's)
Smorz (Kellogg's)
Eggo Cereal Maple Syrup (Kellogg's)
Mini-Swirlz Cinnamon Bun (Kellogg's)
Waffle Crisp (Post)
#2: Quaker Oats Chewy Granola Bars
Most people would see the brand "Quaker" and/or the term "granola bar" and think "healthy." They certainly wouldn't think "trans fat." Well, they'd be wrong. That wholesome Quaker brand isn't quite so wholesome after all. Their ads implore parents to give these things to their kids as a good quality, healthy snack. Unfortunately, these granola bars contain some amount of trans fat per serving.
These are also one of the many products that go the extra mile to include "0g Trans Fat" right on the front of the package for added emphasis. On the bright side, I've been told that there is a tiny asterisk next to this with an even tinier note that basically says "Oh, and by the way, this product actually does contain a small amount of trans fat in each serving." How family friendly of them.
#3: Saltine Crackers
Also called soda crackers, saltine crackers don't exactly scream trans fat based on the fact that they are, you know, plain, boring, tasteless, white crackers. This apparently doesn't matter. I haven't investigated every saltine cracker ever created, but the most popular brands, such as Nabisco's Premium Crackers and Keebler's Zesta Saltine Crackers, do indeed contain some amount of trans fat.
This would lead me to assume that there's a good chance many other brands of these crackers probably do as well.
#4: Special K's entire line of health/weight loss food.
Are you familiar with the brand Special K? You know... they make that typical, useless, empty calorie Special K cereal which they hilariously market as a weight loss product? If so, then you are probably also familiar with the other products they released over the last few years which they also try to sell under the guise of being health/weight loss food (which none of them even remotely are).
Well, here's a little fun fact for you. Special K's entire line of these foods all contain some amount of trans fat per serving. Specifically, this includes all types and flavors of their:
Protein Snack Bars
Protein Meal Bars
Bliss Bars
Cereal Bars
Snack Bites
For those interested, while their newer Chocolatey Delight cereal does indeed contain trans fat as well, their original plain old cereal does NOT. It just contains empty calories -- sorry -- I meant to say "weight loss magic." My mistake.
#5: Girl Scout Cookies
I thought these would be considered "surprising" for 2 reasons. First, they are girl scout cookies. Why on earth would the girl scouts be trying to kill us? Seriously... they're girl scouts. You'd think these would be completely safe and friendly and truly contain 0 grams of trans fat. And, you'd think wrong.
The second and more important reason these are on this list is that a couple of years ago, the girl scouts made a big deal over the fact that their cookies were going "trans fat free." I guess at some point girl scout cookies contained a fairly large amount of trans fat, so much so that they felt it necessary to both remove it and then go out of their way to mention that they were removing it. The teeny tiny problem with this removal is the fact that girl scout cookies still contain some amount of trans fat per serving.
I guess they have to get their "Raise A Stranger's Cholesterol" badge somehow.
#6: Popcorn
We know snack foods are a common source of trans fat. Potato chips? Sure. Cheese curls/balls/puffs/doodles? Of course. But popcorn too? Well, depending on the brand... yup.
I haven't looked at every popcorn brand on the planet, but, as far as microwavable popcorn goes, every single type from the brand Pop Secret contains trans fat (in some cases up to 6 grams per serving). As far as regular, ready-to-eat popcorn goes, several types from the brands Herr's and Frito-Lay also contain some amount of trans fat per serving, some of which were the "light," no butter versions.
A bunch of other brands didn't, but the ones mentioned above did, which leads me to believe at least a few others do as well.
#7: Animal Crackers
As if barely looking like actual animals in the first place wasn't bad enough, it turns out the 2 most popular brands of animal crackers that I know of, Barnum's Animal Crackers (by Nabisco) and Stauffer�s Original Animal Crackers, both contain some amount of trans fat per serving.
See kids, animals can be dangerous.
#8: Fig Newtons
If there was ever to be some at least moderately healthy cookie, you'd think the Fig Newton would be that cookie. I mean... it's a cookie... whose main ingredient is fig. Not chocolate or vanilla filling... but fig. And Nabisco certainly hasn't been shy about that fact. Five seconds of research has reminded me that they've claimed a fig newton contains more fruit than a nutri-grain bar and that it's "the cookie that thinks it's a fruit."
That sounds great and all, but I'd sure like to know what fruit it thinks it is because, last time I checked, no fruit contained trans fat. Fig Newtons on the other hand, do. On the bright side though, their Fat Free Fig Newton honestly does NOT contain any trans fat.
Hopefully someone will inform Brian Regan.
#9: Ritz Crackers
Sure, these might not be quite as surprising as saltine crackers (as these actually have a taste), but even still, some may find it surprising that Ritz Crackers contain some amount of trans fat per serving. And yeah, even the reduced fat version and the whole wheat version of Ritz Crackers do as well.
Mmmmm, forget the cheese. Let's put some Lipitor on those Ritz.
#10: Fortune Cookies
I figured I'd end on a weird one. I first discovered that fortune cookies contain trans fat when one of my fortunes said "Your risk of heart disease will be increasing." Thank you, I'll be here all week.
Seriously though, I found this out one time while waiting to pick up an order at my local Chinese food place. I happened to see a big bag of fortune cookies sitting nearby. And, wouldn't you know, they contained trans fat. Since then I've actually seen fortune cookies from 2 other restaurants, and they too contained trans fat. Whether or not the Chinese food joint near you uses fortune cookies that do, I don't know. However, I'd say the chances are pretty good. Trans Fat FAQ
I don't get something. How do you know that any of these foods contain trans fat if their labels all say "Trans Fat: 0 grams?" Are you making this up? Are you just guessing? Are you a food psychic? What's the deal?
Good question. I'm glad I pretended someone asked it. No, I'm not making it up or guessing, and I don't have any psychic food powers. It's actually really easy to tell if a food contains trans fat even if the label says it doesn't. All you need to do is read through the ingredients. Here's a direct quote from the FDA's web site explaining it:
"Consumers can know if a food contains trans fat by looking at the ingredient list on the food label. If the ingredient list includes the words "shortening," "partially hydrogenated vegetable oil" or "hydrogenated vegetable oil," the food contains trans fat."
So, even if the label clearly states "Trans Fat: 0 grams," and even if the product goes an extra step to print "0g of Trans Fat" somewhere on the front of it, if you see any of the above words in the ingredients, then it contains at least some trans fat per serving. Why these foods? Aren't there plenty of other common foods that contain trans fat that many people aren't aware of?
You bet there are. These were just the 10 best/most surprising ones I could think of. If you happen to know of or come across some other good ones, then by all means pass them along to me. As long as I can confirm it, I will gladly add them to this list and let it keep growing. Just leave a comment and let me know. What types of foods contain the most trans fat? Like, which are the least surprising sources of it?
I'd say fast food is the most abundant source of trans fat, with desserts, and doughnuts, and pastries coming in second place. It's also found in many other typical junky foods. You'll probably be interested in checking out my list of the 88 Fast Food Items Highest In Trans Fat as well as Fast Food Restaurants & Nutrition Facts Compared. How much trans fat are we supposed to eat per day?
If you have to ask this question, then you obviously skipped over everything I said at the very beginning of this because that was where I already answered this question. You should be ashamed of yourself. When you're done being ashamed, go back up and read the beginning of this to get your answer.
__________________ "We can judge the heart of a man by his treatment of animals." ~Immanual Kant~
You can always rely on the FDA to lie as much as possible to support the food lobbyists rather than, say, the citizens of the United States. Thanks guys. You, and your evil accomplices the USDA, are always doing the right thing.
Thanks for posting that in-depth article. Well done, EarlyBird.