Stevia: Good or Bad?

 Sugar is one of the most dangerous ingredients on the market. It’s addictive, added to almost every processed food, and will make you overweight, depressed and sick if you eat too much. In fact, Americans eat close to 130 pounds of the stuff per person per year (4 times more than the recommended daily allowance), likely because it is so addictive. That’s why it’s exciting to know there are alternative sweeteners made in nature, like “stevia,” that don’t wreak havoc on your health – or do they? That’s what I went on a quest to find out. Here’s what happened…

What Is Stevia?

For those of you that are hearing about stevia for the first time, it is a plant that is typically grown in South America, and while it’s extract is 200 times sweeter than sugar, it does not raise blood insulin levels. That’s what makes it so popular. However in 1991 the FDA refused to approve this substance for use due to pressure from makers of artificial sweeteners like Sweet n’ Low and Equal (a one billion dollar industry). But in 2008, the FDA approved the use of rebaudioside compounds that were derived from the stevia plant by Coca-Cola (Cargill) and PepsiCo – hmmm doesn’t that sound suspicious? Not until a major food company got involved did stevia become legal, and only after it had been highly processed using a patentable chemical-laden process…so processed that Truvia (Coca-Cola’s branded product) goes through about 40 steps to process the extract from the leaf, relying on chemicals like acetone, methanol, ethanol, acetonitrile, and isopropanol. Some of these chemicals are known carcinogens (substances that cause cancer), and none of those ingredients sound like real food, do they?

Stevia plant

 

The whole leaf stevia that you can grow in your backyard (and has been used for centuries in countries like Brazil and Paraguay) remains a non-approved food additive by the FDA. However, rebaudioside A (the stevia extract) that was approved by the FDA has not been used for centuries and long term human health impacts have not been studied and are still unknown. The sweetener/sugar industry wields powerful influence over what is ultimately approved at the FDA, and this is just another example where they are influencing decisions that don’t make sense. How can a chemically derived extract be deemed safe in processed food and a plant from mother nature not?

What Kind Of  Stevia To Avoid

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The 40-step patented process used to make Truvia should make you want to steer clear of this stevia product alone, but there are two other concerning ingredients added (not only to Truvia but other stevia products as well). First, erythritol is a naturally occurring sugar that is sometimes found in fruit, but food manufacturers don’t actually use the natural stuff. Instead they start with genetically engineered corn and then go through a complex fermentation process to come up with chemically pure erythritol. Check out the manufacturing process below:

E-Manu-process

“Natural flavors” is another ingredient added to powdered and liquid stevia products, likely due to the fact that once the stevia leaf is processed it can develop a metallic taste. Manufactured natural flavor is contributing to what David Kessler (former head of the FDA) calls a “food carnival” in your mouth. This makes it difficult to stop eating or drinking because the flavors they have synthesized will trick your mind into wanting more and more. When companies use manufactured flavor, they are literally “hijacking” your taste buds one-by-one; that’s why I recommend putting products that contain “natural flavors” back on the shelf.

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“Stevia in the Raw” sounds pure and natural, but when you look at the ingredients the first thing on the label is “dextrose” – so it’s certainly not just stevia in the raw. And Pepsi Co’s “Pure Via,” also pictured above, isn’t exactly pure either with this ingredient being first on the label, too. Dextrose is a sweetener that’s also derived from genetically engineered corn and has a long complicated manufacturing process, just like erythritol.

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 Even certified organic stevia can have sneaky ingredients added, like this one above which has more organic agave inulin than the stevia extract itself. Agave inulin is a highly processed fiber derivative from the blue agave plant. Also on the ingredient list is an item you are probably familiar with from those little packets sometimes found in boxed goods – silica (pictured). It is added to improve the flow of powdery substances and is the same ingredient that helps strengthen concrete and creates glass bottles and windowpanes. It may cause irritation of the digestive tract (if eaten) and irritation of the respiratory tract (if accidentally inhaled). While it is non-toxic and probably won’t kill you in small quantities, it’s definitely not a real food ingredient I would cook with or that I want to be putting in my body.

 

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Why You Should Care About the “Monsanto Protection Act” – A Must Read!

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There’s a lot to “The Monsanto Protection Act”, but even if you don’t feel it’s important enough to dig into and understand in full detail, there is one simple fact that should motivate you to DEMAND CHANGE NOW.

This bill, signed into law by President Obama on Tuesday, bars federal courts from being able to halt the sale or planting of genetically modified (GMO) or genetically engineered (GE) seeds, no matter what health issues might arise during further testing.  This is all I need to know to assume the worst.  Yes, I’m assuming.  But when a company pushes for legislation that guarantees their product can’t be taken off the market even it’s found to harm human health I think two things.  1.  They are worried it might be found to be harmful to human health.  2. This seriously brings into question the morals of this company.  They should willingly take harmful products off the market if they have any ethics at all.  I don’t trust a company with zero ethics.

Just in case you’re thinking, well maybe Monsanto had nothing to do with the language in the legislation, I read several articles that noted legislators and Monsanto worked together to craft it.  Monsanto’s influence on legislation and work with legislators is just one example of a scary, slippery slope that threatens our rights and freedoms.  President Lincoln said that “government of the people, by the people, for the people” was the way to ensure the survival of America’s representative democracy. This looks more like government by big corporations for big corporations.

What can we do? We can start by demanding mandatory labeling of GMO foods.  Click here to make your voice heard.

Here are two more links to articles that will help educate you on the issue.

New York Daily News 

International Business News

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Will Everyone Please Eat Gluten? Please?

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A new study by the NPD group shows that 29% of Americans are now trying to cut gluten out of their diets, most of them just cause. Every time another person makes this foolish decision, my life gets harder.

I’ve been a nutrition educator for over 13 years. I am here to tell you first-hand that going gluten-free is not a almond flour paved path to the GOOP holy trifecta of increased energy, a dewy complexion and perfectly fitting skinny jeans. It is just a diet that is medically necessary for some and no better and probably even a bit worse for the rest of you. (If you suspect you are one of those for whom it might be medically necessary, I wholly endorse you giving it a shot, but, please, take it seriously and see a doctor.)

When people first started getting diagnosed 20 years ago people would take long Sunday drives to look  for a loaf of bread that was only slightly better than vile and weighed more than a biology textbook. Lost and vulnerable, they ate a lot of Lay’s potato chips back then. By the late 199o’s things were a little better. This was about the time when Whole Foods markets began popping up all over America and most of them would dedicate a few shelves to palatable gluten free goods.

So when gluten-free started trending a few years ago and people could finally understand what this red velvet cupcake phenomenon was all about, they were thrilled. Pizza delivery! Deli sandwiches! Whoopie pies! Chicken nuggets! Suddenly gluten-free was everywhere. But this was when things took also took a turn for the worst.

You see, when something that is medically necessary for some becomes something cool and trendy for the rest of the world, stuff gets messed up. It is actually harder for celiac suffers to eat out now than it was a few years ago because a little dusting of flour on a piece of flounder equals a few days in bed for them.

And those red velvet cupcakes? They are now often stuffed alongside their gluten-containing counterparts in bakery displays. Considering even a few splashes of soy sauce, in which wheat is a minor ingredient, can trigger celiac episodes, a few crumbs of something not gluten-free is just not an option. Now I am nostalgic for the days when we were a fringe movement instead of a Miley Cyrus-endorsed lifestyle.

As I mentioned already, gluten-free is not the answer to your dieting needs. Remember when we all went gaga for fat-free diets in the late 90s and guiltlessly swallowed entire packages of Snackwells devils food cookies and then couldn’t figure out why we weren’t losing weight? Exactly. I have met many a celiac over the years, and I promise they wouldn’t all pass your supermarket tabloids “bikini body” test. Considering that many gluten-free goods are higher in fat to substitute for the missing gluten — which literally holds baked goods together — a gluten-free diet can actually leave us worse off, weight-wise.

For those of you who swear off gluten not because you want to lose weight, but just because you think it will make you healthier: please stick with the whole wheat. Fiber is one of the most important things you can eat for health’s sake and it is extremely difficult (and pricey, see below) to get your hands on when you are strictly gluten-free. Also, for people with no sensitivity to gluten, a slice of whole wheat bread is by no means worse for you than a slice of teff, garbanzo bean and brown rice fiber bread. And the whole wheat bread will be, at least, one million times more delicious.

Also, this life is expensive! Literally, on average, 242% more expensive, according to researchers from the Dalhousie Medical School in Canada. Let me break this down for you: pretzels can run $5-$6 a bag, individual sized pizzas around $15-$20 at restaurants and even $11 for crappy tasting ones from the market, and cupcakes and muffins are in the $4 range. I just spent $12 on a whole-grain gluten-free loaf the other day and didn’t think twice about it, because this is just my life. But it doesn’t have to be yours.

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Gun Found in 18 Month Old Meat

This strange story comes directly from my hometown of Greeley. Apparently a gun and ammunition was packaged and delivered with some frozen ribs from Greeley, Colorado to an Albertsons in New Mexico.

Obviously this is weird, crazy news. But the other part that I found incredible about it was that commercial meat is frozen for that long before being delivered to the store?! The meat was packaged in June of 2011 and only now delivered to the store. Is that normal operating procedure? If so, our meat selection in the grocery store is anything but fresh.

This is just another reason to choose your food, and especially your meat, carefully!

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More Bad BPA News

You’ve probably heard the bad news about the chemical BPA in plastic water bottles, but there’s more. It has also been connected with the childhood obesity epidemic, especially in regards to canned foods.
Click here to read more: http://healthyliving.msn.com/pregnancy-parenting/kids-health/the-easiest-way-for-kids-to-lose-weight

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