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SWEETENERS

Pura Vida

Well-Known Member
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Alternative sweeteners to sugar like agave syrup and stevia are often perceived as healthier options but they can also be overdone, a dietitian cautions.
As research links refined sugar to Type 2 diabetes and heart disease, some people are switching.
"Refined sugar, it's the new smoking, isn't it?" said Toronto dietitian Jennifer Sygo, author of Unmasking Superfoods.
CBC News asked Sygo about whether some alternative sweeteners are healthier than sugar.
"Somebody switching from table sugar to agave, will typically see less of a blood sugar spike," said Sygo. "It does have some redeeming nutritional properties, but they're small."
Agave, the plant used to make tequila, is higher in calories than sugar and three times as sweet.
Stevia has no calories, looks like sugar and is up to 300 times sweeter.
"We don't want to habituate our taste buds, get them used to sweet foods all the time," Sygo advised on using alternative sweeteners.
jennifer-sygo.jpg

We don't want to habituate our taste buds to sweet foods all the time, says Jennifer Sygo. (CBC)
For non-nutritive, no calorie sweeteners, there's a contentious debate within nutrition circles about whether they make us crave sugar down the road.
"If you're going to use stevia, use it with caution," Sygo suggested.
At a bakery in Toronto, co-owner Ashley Whittig swears by organic agave nectar for sweet delights without the sugar rush.
"I don't feel as jacked up after," Whittig said.
But researchers have demonstrated a "healthy halo effect" — when you substitute something that is unhealthy with a food you perceive to be healthy, you end up eating more. For example, some people end up eating more ice cream when there are berries on top because they think the health value of the fruit allows them to consume extra.
"In general, we could all do well to reduce our need for highly sweet, sugary foods, no matter where they come from," Sygo said.
With files from CBC's
 
Agave syrup isn't an alternative to sugar as it is a sugar (fructose) which is even worse than sugar (50% sucrose/50% fructose) as the body stores it as fat more readily. The refining process used for sugar is irrelevant in all of this.
 
I looked at all these sweeteners in Whole Foods a couple of days ago and left empty-handed and confused. Every one of them said on the packet that in 100g of the product there was 97-98g of carbohydrates.

How on earth can they be any different from any other form of sugar for our blood sugar?
 
I looked at all these sweeteners in Whole Foods a couple of days ago and left empty-handed and confused. Every one of them said on the packet that in 100g of the product there was 97-98g of carbohydrates.

How on earth can they be any different from any other form of sugar for our blood sugar?
It's a matter of whether or not our bodies can convert them into usable energy (glucose). Many sugar alcohols and artificial sweeteners cannot be properly digested. Like fiber, they pass through our bodies undigested.
 
It's a matter of whether or not our bodies can convert them into usable energy (glucose). Many sugar alcohols and artificial sweeteners cannot be properly digested. Like fiber, they pass through our bodies undigested.
How can we tell which ones? The labelling on UK foodstuffs tells us the available carbohydrates, so I think the 97 or 98g carbs must be available. To tell the truth I don't feel like testing them on myself!
 
For myself I use Xylitol and Erythritol in baking and they have no effect on my BS. I do limit myself to 1 piece of baking a day though so I dont fall back into old habits. The experts are always coming up with new theories why this one is better than that one and so forth but I prefer to test to find something that suits me and I stick with it.
 
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