An ingredient label might
contain no mention of ‘sugar’, but that is actually no guarantee at all. There
are lots of substances that taste, act, and affect us in the same way that
refined sugar does – just without the name. There are some you will have heard
of, like high fructose corn syrup, but that is far from the only example. A
prime example from recent years is the misleading
labeling of Vitaminwater, which has been
persistently promoted as a health food but is in fact quite the opposite.
Here is a list of 56
names for sugar, many of which you might not even recognize. Be sure to look
out for them when you next read an ingredient label!
56 NAMES FOR SUGAR |
Barley malt |
Dehydrated cane
juice |
Golden sugar |
Molasses |
Barbados
sugar |
Demerara sugar |
Golden syrup |
Muscovado |
Beet
sugar |
Dextran |
Grape sugar |
Panocha |
Brown
sugar |
Dextrose |
High fructose corn syrup |
Powdered sugar |
Buttered
syrup |
Diastatic malt |
Honey |
Raw sugar |
Cane
juice |
Diatase |
Icing sugar |
Refiner’s syrup |
Cane
sugar |
Ethyl maltol |
Invert sugar |
Rice syrup |
Caramel |
Free flowing brown sugars |
Lactose |
Sorbitol |
Corn
syrup |
Fructose |
Malt |
Sorghum syrup |
Corn syrup
solids |
Fruit juice |
Maltodextrin |
Sucrose |
Confectioner’s
sugar |
Fruit juice concentrate |
Maltose |
Sugar (granulated) |
Carob
syrup |
Galactose |
Malt syrup |
Treacle |
Castor
sugar |
Glucose |
Mannitol |
Turbinado sugar |
Date
sugar |
Glucose solids |
Maple syrup |
Yellow sugar |
Some of these you will recognize as sugar, but what about ethyl maltol and maltose? Manufacturers are sneaking these types of sugar into everyday products without the consumer knowing what they are eating or drinking. Even the most health-conscious of us consumes processed foods, even if just on the odd occasion. However if we don’t know what these sugars are called, and what they can do to our bodies, how can we make informed decisions? Is the answer to simply avoid processed foods altogether, or are we simply misunderstanding sugar and the effect it has on us?
The consensus is that it is not the type of sugar you are consuming, but simply the quantities of sugar that are found in processed foods. By using lots of different types and names of sugar, food manufacturers are able to list their sugar contents as lower than if they were to use purely cane sugar or high fructose corn syrup. If they were bundled together these sugars would often be on the top of the ingredients list, but by using several different types they are often hidden further down. We need to become more aware of sugar in our foods, and inspect labels carefully to identify which sugars – and how much of each sugar – are in what we are eating.