fenix92 said:No calories, no fat, no carbs. Am I the only one worrying about the stuff that's in these? Would be interesting if someone who has one of their products could quote the table of content.
ariel said:that's interesting! keep us posted about them.. Me, i'm into sugar free diet for 3 weeks now. I see a big difference with my weight loss. Instead of sugar, I now substitute my sweet intake with Natvia, an all natural sweetener. It has no aspartame, saccharin, sucralose, and fructose, but it tastes really great.
this is what I wrote on another thread recentlyfenix92 said:No calories, no fat, no carbs. Am I the only one worrying about the stuff that's in these? Would be interesting if someone who has one of their products could quote the table of content.
Check the label when it arrives. I strongly suspect that the calories/carbs etc will be per serving.
In the US products can be labelled per serving size (bet it's small) and if the calories per serving are less than 5 then they may be declared as 0.
What are insignificant amounts of nutrients?
Answer: These are the amounts that are permitted to be shown as zero on the Nutrition Facts label (e.g., less than 5 calories may be expressed as 0 calories)
http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceComplia ... smdiscrete
The product will undoubtedly be low cal/carb etc but I'm sure that if it had an EU label and the amounts had to be expressed per 100g ,they would not be nil.
Let me know if I'm right about it being per serving and how big that serving is.
I wonder what the UK laws are on imported goods, especially ones making nutrition claim
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