Guest guest Posted December 6, 2006 Report Share Posted December 6, 2006 All I'm sure this is meant to be an expose on the ridiculous. How to make drinks healthier? Take out the HFCS and use healthy, natural sugar instead. Cheers Arturo A Soda Maker, Touting Health,Moves to Sugar By BETSY MCKAY Wall Street Journal December 5, 2006; Page B1 In their quest to reach health-conscious consumers, some beverage companies are turning to a surprising ingredient: sugar. Soda Co., a Seattle maker of quirky soft drinks sold by Target Corp. and other retailers throughout the U.S., plans to replace high-fructose corn syrup -- a ubiquitous but demonized sweetener -- with cane sugar in its drinks, starting in January. The move by , which churns out Blue Bubble Gum and Twisted Lime sodas, along with an energy drink called WhoopAss, aims to capitalize on the bad publicity surrounding high-fructose corn syrup, which some scientists have linked to rising U.S. obesity rates. Sweetening its sodas with cane sugar instead of HFCS " truly differentiates and provides the consumer with a healthier alternative, " van Stolk, the company's president and chief executive, said in announcing the switch. Unlike HFCS, he said, cane sugar is a " natural ingredient " with a " positive perception in the consumer's mind. " HFCS sweetens Coca-Cola, Pepsi and many other drinks and foods. It has also become a lightning rod in the search for causes for the sharp increase in U.S. obesity rates. Some scientists have pointed out that its prevalence in the American diet rose along with obesity over the past two decades. But many of those critics have since backed off, acknowledging that the sweetener isn't metabolized by the body any differently than table sugar -- and that neither one is particularly healthy. The two sweeteners are similar in their makeup: Despite its moniker, HFCS contains 55% fructose and 45% glucose when used in soda, while regular table sugar, also known as sucrose, contains 50% fructose and 50% glucose. Switching to sugar from HFCS " is going to have at best a trivial effect " on health, says Barry Popkin, a professor of nutrition at the University of North Carolina's School of Public Health in Chapel Hill and an author of a 2004 paper in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition that proposed the link between obesity and HFCS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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