Saturday, September 7, 2013

How to Read Food Labels


How to read Food Labels

It can help you make healthier choices of food if you lean how to read and understand food labels.  American Heart Association provides some tips for making the most of the information on the Nutrition Facts label:


Start here. Note the size of a single serving and how many servings are in the package.
Check total calories per serving. Look at the serving size and how many servings you’re really consuming. If you double the servings you eat, you double the calories and nutrients, including the Percent Daily Value (% DV).
Limit these nutrients. Remember, you need to limit your total fat to no more than 56–78 grams a day — including no more than 16 grams of saturated fat, less than two grams of trans fat, and less than 300 mg cholesterol (for a 2,000 calorie diet).
Get enough of these nutrients. Make sure you get 100 percent of the fiber, vitamins and other nutrients you need every day.
Quick guide to % DV. The % DV section tells you the percent of each nutrient in a single serving, in terms of the daily recommended amount. As a guide, if you want to consume less of a nutrient (such as saturated fat, cholesterol or sodium), choose foods with a lower % DV — 5 percent or less is low. If you want to consume more of a nutrient (such as fiber), seek foods with a higher % DV — 20 percent or more is high.
In addition to the Nutrition Facts label, a lot of foods today also come with nutrient content claims provided by the manufacturer. These claims are typically featured in ads for the foods or in the promotional copy on the food packages themselves. They are strictly defined by the FDA. The chart below provides some of the most commonly used nutrient content claims, along with a detailed description of what the claim means.
a food claims to be...
It means that one serving of the product contains...
Calorie free
Less than 5 calories
Sugar free
Less than 0.5 grams of sugar
Fat
Fat free
Less than 0.5 grams of fat
Low fat
3 grams of fat or less
Reduced fat or less fat
At least 25 percent less fat than the regular product
Low in saturated fat
1 gram of saturated fat or less, with not more than 15 percent of the calories coming from saturated fat
Lean
Less than 10 grams of fat, 4.5 grams of saturated fat and 95 milligrams of cholesterol
Extra lean
Less than 5 grams of fat, 2 grams of saturated fat and 95 milligrams of cholesterol
Light (lite)
At least one-third fewer calories or no more than half the fat of the regular product, or no more than half the sodium of the regular product
Cholesterol
Cholesterol free
Less than 2 milligrams of cholesterol and 2 grams (or less) of saturated fat
Low cholesterol
20 or fewer milligrams of cholesterol and 2 grams or less of saturated fat
Reduced cholesterol
At least 25 percent less cholesterol than the regular product and 2 grams or less of saturated fat
Sodium
Sodium free or no sodium
Less than 5 milligrams of sodium and no sodium chloride in ingredients
Very low sodium
35 milligrams or less of sodium
Low sodium
140 milligrams or less of sodium
Reduced or less sodium
At least 25 percent less sodium than the regular product
Fiber
High fiber
5 grams or more of fiber
Good source of fiber
2.5 to 4.9 grams of fiber

If you can’t remember the definitions of all of the terms, don’t worry. You can use these general guidelines instead:
    “Free” means a food has the least possible amount of the specified nutrient.
    “Very Low” and “Low” means the food has a little more than foods labeled “Free.”
    “Reduced” or “Less” mean the food has 25 percent less of a specific nutrient than the regular version of the food.

This content was retrieved from American Heart Association website: http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/GettingHealthy/NutritionCenter/HeartSmartShopping/Reading-Food-Nutrition-Labels_UCM_300132_Article.jsp

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