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22.7: Summary

  • Page ID
    60541
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    Food labels can help informed consumers make wise nutrition choices. Until 1973, little more than the product name, weight, manufacturer, and list of ingredients were required on the labels. A 1973 law required nutrition information if nutrients had been added or where claims had been made about the food’s nutritive value. But the nutrition information and claims were often confusing and misleading, and many foods didn’t carry any nutrition information at all.

    The 1990 Nutrition Labeling and Education Act was enacted to require nutrition information on almost all food labels, and to make the information more consistent and relevant to current nutritional concerns. For example, Serving size and Calories head the list of Nutrition Facts on the label. Whereas nutritional deficiencies used to be our biggest dietary problem, our main concern now is with excesses, e.g., excess calories, sugar, sodium.

    Among the other food-label changes, standard serving sizes have been established (nutrition information is given per serving), terms such as low-fat are precisely defined, and only certain health claims are permitted. As before, ingredients must be listed in decreasing order of weight. Nutrition labeling is voluntary for many raw foods, such as fresh fruits, vegetables, meat, poultry, and fish.

    “Enriched” refers to the addition of iron and the B-vitamins thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, and folic acid to refined grain. Virtually all of our white flour is enriched, as would be the pasta, cereal, etc., made from enriched flour. Enrichment is indicated in the ingredient list (e.g., enriched flour).

    Grading of food by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture refers to the esthetic appearance and texture of food, not the nutritive value. A lower grade of meat, for example, may not be as tender but may be “healthier,” because of a lower fat content. Similarly, canned peaches that are less firm and are unevenly cut can be just as nutritious as those of a higher grade.

    Consumers knowledgeable in nutrition can use the nutrition information on food labels to choose a healthful diet. As informed consumers, we know that we don’t have to exclude foods high in saturated fat, salt, sugar, etc. Rather, we know that food labels help us identify these foods more easily, so that we can eat them in smaller amounts or not as often. The food labels help us select a diet that’s both healthy and pleasurable.


    This page titled 22.7: Summary is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill.

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