Turn the bottle or can around and read the back. It will tell you how many grams of carbohydrates are in it per 100 ml and you'll have a clear answer for any drink you fancy.Basic question - how sugary are sugary drinks?
Or more usefully, how sugary are un-sugary drinks, percent, per 100g?
It's not your fault. We have to suffer the silly advice from Public Health England who always mention sugar and not carbs. Also EU Traffic Light package labelling mentions sugars and not carbs. Few know that sugar is just another carb.All very helpful replies - many thanks.
I've clearly been focussing too much on the 'of which sugars' percent, and allowing myself too high a figure on that alone - !
Thanks again.
P
I like Robinson's "no added sugar" squash but you still have to read the label as the flavours vary. Note the carbs per 100ml for squash may be quoted before dilution.All very helpful replies - many thanks.
I've clearly been focussing too much on the 'of which sugars' percent, and allowing myself too high a figure on that alone - !
Thanks again.
P
This is great advice i always look at sugar content and never carbs. Thank you as i am really struggling just now can't get my sweet tooth for Chocolate under control at allAs other say ignore the sugar amounts and look at the carb amounts on the label. This will tell you how “sugary” things are once they are inside your body. The “sugar” might come from more disguised sources in carbohydrates, even things that don’t look or seem sweet, but it’s still there.
Under 5% go for it. Under 10% maybe if it’s not a huge amount. Over 10% unless it’s a very small amount think very carefully.
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