nosh magazine (issue 4) | Page 7

nosh magazine Dietitians have been warning people for the past five years or more not to “drink in the calories” and that juice is fruit in concentrated form (read my post on “Why juice is not fruit”, for example). Whoever said flavoured milk or iced tea drinks are ‘healthy’? They may be healthier choices than sweetened soft drinks but they are not on any ‘must eat lists’ or pyramids. Damon does not drink any fizzy drink (despite talking about it a lot), nor eat lollies or chocolate. He says he’s only eating ‘healthy food’ – but they aren’t truly healthy foods by any definition; instead, he’s consuming a lot of processed snacks. 2. Damon is not eating a healthy balanced diet Damon eats an extreme diet, choosing processed foods with a ‘health halo’. This is not typical and it’s definitely not healthy. As far as I can see, in the film, he eats no veggies, whole fruits, nuts, legumes or whole grains. Little wonder then that he complains that he is now snacking a lot more without feeling full. I saw lots of pouches, bars, If your kinder, school, corporate or community group is planning a private screening of That Sugar Film, contact n4 food and health to have a Nutrition Expert attend your screening and respond to audience questions. They will help decipher the fact from the fiction and share some evidence-based information about sugar. To have a Nutrition Expert join you for a post-screening Q&A, email [email protected] milk drinks, purees and fruit juice drinks being slurped down. There’s little fibre or protein in his diet. is not representative of the average intake, and certainly way too high for a man in his late 30s with his activity level. 3. Sugar is singled out as the villain, but what about refined carbs and processed foods? The bottom line At the end Damon acknowledges that sugar is “not the only thing to blame, the real cause is refined carbs and fructose”. This is my sentiment exactly and I’ve written about the real causes of the obesity epidemic and why sugar loves fat and refined starch on my website in recent times. 4. 40 teaspoons a day is not an average adult intake At 40 teaspoons of sugar a day, Damon’s intake is more suited to a 15-year-old boy’s intake, which is pretty high due to the growth stage and high levels of physical activity. From the 2011-12 Health Survey*, the average adult now consumes some 26 teaspoons of sugar, with the highest group being young adult males 19 to 30 years who take in some 33 teaspoons. So 40 teaspoons If That Sugar Film helps people reduce the amount of processed foods they eat in favour of home-cooked, whole foods using basic ingredients then that’s great. I do hope that it doesn’t contribute to people missing the point – that the obesity crisis is not purely about sugar, but about processed food and our total diet as a whole. This film had an opportunity to shine a light on the hidden sugars in our diets, I just hope the obvious ‘overloading’ doesn’t make people either discount it altogether as being a set up, or tip them the other way into removing sugar entirely. As usual the message is, MODERATION is what works! Reference: *Australian Health Survey. Table 10.9 summarising carbohydrates N CATHERINE SAXELBY, APD Learn more about Catherine: website | profile Catherine Saxelby helps busy women eat right, lose weight and boost their energy through her website, Foodwatch. www.n4foodandhealth.com 7