Question:

Outrageous label tricks

by Guest4465  |  12 years, 7 month(s) ago

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When you pick up a tempting food, scan the nutrition label, and think, "Wow, cool" — because it's surprisingly lite or low-cal or free of trans fat — you expect those claims to be bona fide, right? Hah. Food packagers can be sneaky. Watch out for these 4 typical traps.

When it comes to comfort food, has it got to be Kraft's Macaroni and Cheese? Look twice. Like many boxed food mixes, the confusing label lists two sets of nutrition stats — and the first one is for the dry mix only. Unless you plan on eating your mac-cheese mix straight from the box, the prepared version (made with margarine and 2% milk) adds an extra 15 grams fat and 150 calories per serving to the figures on the label.

Just downed a tall (23.5-ounce) can of AriZona Mucho Mango juice blend? Brace yourself. The sugar hit is 75 grams, not 25, as a glance at the label suggests. And the calorie hit is 360, not 120. That's ?cause one serving is only 8 ounces — you're supposed to save the remaining two-thirds of the can for two more drinks.  

Snacking on one of those smallish 3-ounce bags of multigrain Sun Chips? Smart, but note the itty-bitty serving size — only 1/3 of that bag! Scarf down more and you might as well be enjoying Oreos.

Sometimes you really need a cookie, right? Happily, the nutrition label on your fave brand says 0 grams of both, fat and trans fat. That's good enough that you can deal with the sugar guilt tomorrow, right? Sorry, but 0 doesn't mean zero. It means less than 0.5 gram per serving. Sure, that's not much — unless a serving is, say, two Snackwells Chocolate Mint cookies and by midnight you've finished the whole box. (Who, you?)

 Tags: label, outrageous, tricks

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2 ANSWERS

  1. Guest765
    What my wish is that food companies by made to put the expiry date on ALL items; tins, cans, packages. I am sick of not knowing when the item was produced,or when its expiry or "good before" date is. When I give items from my pantry to the food bank, how do they know if I have had the item for five years? If they can print a stupid code on, such as H78mm89, why not the date

  2. Guest3343
    Do people really read the labels. just be more active and eat anything you want. usually its much more cost effective to eat whatever you want rather than eating low fat. the food companies know by placing a low fat label they can charge much more.
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Latest activity: 15 years, 4 month(s) ago.
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