Sugar Substitutes





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Cuisine Convene  |  Fri Dec 16 2022  |  822 views



Sugar Substitutes

What if you could drink all the soda that you wanted, and never get fat? To some people, such as, Computer Programmers, harried Editors and every ten-year-old in the world, this sounds like heaven, while others shudder at the proposition. We can’t hear enough about how harmful Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and the like are to our bodies (and, thanks to all of the excess caffeine, our minds) these days, and every month it seems like a new diet soda arrives to alleviate those worries while still treating our collective sweet tooth. Diet Coke, Diet Pepsi, those pink Tab cans, Pepsi One, C2, Pepsi Maxit, and the list goes on. But even these sodas, designed to appeal to the healthy minded who can’t give up that sweet taste, may have a dark side. A recent study noted a correlation between heavy diet soda consumption and obesity; and while correlation is not causation, there may be some legitimacy to the study’s main thrust. People who drink diet soda, the study maintains, are more likely to consume other unhealthy sweet snacks. You can’t fool your body by drinking something sweet but light; the body will demand more sweet stuff until it's desires are sated. Under Fire This isn’t the first-time people have taken shots at the Diet market. Saccharin, the first artificial sweetener (famous for its pink packets and presence in soft drink Tab), was dogged by cancer rumors from 1907 until the year 2000, when the U.S. government officially retracted a flawed 1970s study which suggested the sweetener caused cancerous tumors in lab rats. Its replacement on the market, Aspartame, fared little better; though legal from 1983 onwards, it has suffered constant criticism as a potential toxin. Even Sucralose, the latest and safest pseudo-sugar, is not immune sure, it doesn’t have any negative effects now, but give it a few years Meanwhile, what’s the average person to do? Most simply shrug and use one of the above. But while the ingredients are recognized as safe by the FDA, it never hurts to have a backup, right? The Tolls Xylitol and maltitol are widely used in sugar free gums and candies around the world; both are highly sweet, with fewer calories and carbs than plain old sucrose. Xylitol, a sugar alcohol naturally derived from the fiber of many fruits and vegetables, is about as sweet as table sugar but with a third less food energy. While a teaspoon of table sugar contains fifteen calories, a teaspoon of xylitol only contains 9.6. In addition, its carb-free. Bonuses include little to no aftertaste and its tooth free properties; the biggest downside is its mild laxative effect. Xylitol is present in many sugarless gums and is marketed under the brand name The Ultimate Sweetener. Another sugar alcohol, maltitol is obtained by hydrogenating maltose obtained from scratch; it contains about half as many calories per gram as sugar (2.1 vs. 4.0). Being extremely sweet, it needn’t be mixed with other sweeteners, but it does not caramelize, which can make using it in some recipes difficult. It does not promote tooth decay. Restraint These and other sweeteners are a boon to diabetics or those suffering from obesity. But for the rest of us is it even necessary to pick through these substitutes? Sugar is a treat. One the body craves often, yes, but not one the body needs all that much of. So instead of pounding those diet sodas for your sweetness-and-caffeine fix, consider some tea and a biscuit. Rather than baking cookies with Splenda each night, make them with real sugar once a week. Go ahead and eat the real thing; just do it sensibly, and you’ll never have to worry about cancerous rat tumors while you’re enjoying your sweets!


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