High Fructose Corn Syrup....it's bad, m'kay

I was recently asked about the potential evils of High Fructose Corn Syrup...a sweetner that is used in just about everything nowadays. Read this, know this........


High-Fructose Corn Syrup is used to sweeten almost everything these days. It wasn't in our food supply before the 1970's, but since then our consumption has skyrocketed. These supersugars quickly enter your bloodstream and trigger both hormonal and chemical changes that make you feel even hungrier...also, insulin surges start a cascade that tells your brain to eat more and your fat cells to store more fat.

Why the fructose in high-fructose corn syrup is different from that of ordinary sugar: The digestion, absorbtion and metabolism of fructose differ in significant ways from those of regular sugar. Table sugar is a combination of glucose and fructose and is known as sucrose. Glucose is the basic sugar the body uses for energy and metabolism - one of the key building block of all carbohydrates and often found as part of other slowly absorbed sugars found in beans and whole grains. Fructose is also one of those building blocks, found in mostly fruit, where it is packaged along with fiber and an abundance of protective nutrients. But fructose does not stimulate insulin secretion and the consequent increase in leptin, a hormone produced by fat cells that tells your brain you are full...which reduces appetite.

High Fructose Corn Syrup has processed fructose which is absorbed more quickly and enters our cells without any help (it does not require insulin the way glucose does). Once inside the cell it becomes an uncontrolled source of carbon (acetyl-CoA) that is made into cholesterol and triglycerides. Basically, that means eating HFCS makes your cholesterol level shoot straight up and causes problems with your liver that slows down your metabolism even more. It actually produces a fatty liver and is the major cause of abnormal liver functions. HFCS is probably the biggest reason for the increase in cholesterol levels we have seen over the last 25 years. By cutting-out HFCS you can see a huge drop in your cholesterol & triglyceride levels!

In fact, NONE of the normal controls on appetite is triggered when you eat foods or beverages containing HFCS. When you metabolize glucose, your brain normally gets the mesage that you are full...that doesn't happen with HFCS...you just stay hungry and keep eating, which continues to fuel the cycle. Bottom line: eating foods with HFCS leads to increased appetite, calorie consumption, intake, weight gain, high cholesterol and high blood pressure. - Doctor Mark Hyman, M.D. His book: Ultra-Metabolism (the source I used to site this info...not promoting his book).


Also....when people are obese or heavy, the abdonimal fat cells tend to swell...thus making it more difficult for insulin to attach and usher-in the glucose; the pancreas responds by making more insulin which in turns causes your blood-sugar level to drop rapidly...which then allows other controls to signal to the brian that you're hungry again....another viscious cycle. Fat people truly are experiencing real hunger, while thin people don't have their controls all hay-wired. Bottom line: fat people are fat because they're fat, and thin people are thin because they're thin. Being fat promotes being fat and makes it difficult to lose weight.

I liken it to boogie-boarding....if you get in front of the wave you get an easy ride in, but if the wave passes you, you'll spend huge enegy and work hard but never catch-up. From my former perspective I knew I was fat and I just knew I'd have to fight like hell to lose weight...but once I did and AS I DID my body would move towards a more natural & fit state. Just do it!
 
Great Post BSL - excuse my ignorance though can you name a few products that generally carry HFCS?... of course I will be looking out for it on the ingredients panel...
 
Great Post BSL - excuse my ignorance though can you name a few products that generally carry HFCS?... of course I will be looking out for it on the ingredients panel...

Almost everything that you see in a grocery store.

From soft drinks and juices, to chips and candy, to cereals. 9/10 things in the gorcery store will probably contain it.

If it comes in a plastic container and is processed, it probably contains it.
 
OM-Gosh.....just about everything in the way of junk-food contains HFCS!!!

It'll show-up on the ingredients very quickly. Just about all soda drinks have HFCS and many fruit-juices have HFCS blended into them. Candy bars, cookies.....basically ANYTHING that could contain sugar can have HFCS used as an inexpensive cheap alternative to using real sugar. Many cereals have it too.....

Even my Quaker Oats Fiber bars, which lend themselves to being uber-healthy use HFCS as a sweetening component.

But let's be realistic about it....a bit of HFCS used as part of the sweetner is plausible...BUT, a whole can of soda with loads of it...there's the issue. Total elimination from our diets just isn't practical, but dramatic reduction and consumer awareness goes a long ways. If the nutritional contents show a high amount of grams of carb's, and the list shows HFCS...it's likely a large component of that product: avoid it. Just read the labels, it'll disgust you how many food manufacturers cheap-out and load HFCS into their products.

On an additional note....avoid artificial sweetners, they too have their issues. I won't list all the potential problems of each sweetner, but they ALL have their downsides; there's no free-ride folks....and doesn't it bug you a little that ants won't drink the diet stuff??? If their microscopic brains can intuitively figure out and know it's bad for ya, shouldn't that say something???

Be leary of juices, that's where most your sweetners come into play. If you see pomegranate juice or other fruits that generally aren't very sweet....watch and see if apple juice isn't used as the prime sweetening component to bring a sweet taste to the mix. Apple juice is your primary added component to these naturally sweetened organic products. BUT is that good????

You have to remember....in nature, the sugar is bonded to the fiber; our bodies have to breakdown the fiber in order to get to the sugars, this acts as a regulatory measure...you can only get the sugar at a certain rate. That's what you want, a nice slow regulated rate of energy ingestion, anything that comes in too fast, spikes your blood-sugar and your body releases insulin and stores it as fat.

Think of fiber as a hard shell on a walnut, in order to eat a walnut you have to take the time to break open the shell and then eat it...it takes time and before you know it you realize your not hungry anymore, but more then anything, the shell slows you down and acts to essentially regulate the rate at which you can ingest things. Now, think of buying a bag of walnuts that are out of the shell; you can just grab handful after handful and slam 'em down. Back to the apple: eating the whole apple means your body has to digest & breakdown the fiber....the result is a nice slow/gradual infusion of energy for your body....you feel full longer cause your tummy is busy digesting AND your not likely to spike your blood-sugar which results in the energy being stores as FAT.

The obvious problem with apple juice is that it has no fiber...look at it; it's generally clear! You're drinking liquid sugar...granted it's "natural"...but more so it's just naturally derived, but the fiber is missing!

Hey, don't get me wrong...I love pizza, sushi, chocolate fudge brownies and what-not....but we have to realize, our bodies evolved from eating whole & natural things....when we divert from the natural & intended path, there are consequences....and the people who make food are ONLY interested in our loving it so much that we buy it again.

You go to 2 restaurants...one taste good, the other taste GREAT. Which one are you likely to return to? Well, knowing several chefs I can tell you...the cornerstone of great taste is pivotally based on several key components: sugar, butter, salt & oil. They wanna rock your culinary world.....I can assure you they don't care what the affect on your cholesterol, triglycerides or blood-pressure might be....it's all about the might buck! Eater-Beware! And when food products come out that seem health-conscious, that's just a manufacturer marketing the product as such.

One of the biggest problems we face today is that companies strive for profit, and the cheaper they can make it, the more profit they make. If buying HFCS is the profitable way, they'll do it....and they have.

And these dairy products?....farmers have more growth hormones, steroids, antibiotics and other supplements added to them....it all trickles down. Same thing with the fish in the ocean, loaded with mercury and other toxins. The world is getting smaller, we can no longer put things out of sight and out of mind and hope they won't affect us. The incidence of autism, ADD and other genetically-related issues is sharply up...and it's not that they're just labelling any hyper kid as ADD either. The generall problem with society is that we're financially motivated and we only act on issues when they become a crisis. Let's hope we survive the heart-attack and then we'll get serious about dieting and getting in shape.

On a good note, by reading this and being on this forum...at least YOU are likely headed & moving in the right direction.

All praise to Chillen....peace-out :D
 
Almost everything that you see in a grocery store.

From soft drinks and juices, to chips and candy, to cereals. 9/10 things in the gorcery store will probably contain it.

If it comes in a plastic container and is processed, it probably contains it.

Mmmm i think i am pretty much in the clear as I dont drink juice or eat chips and candy or cereal (except for organic oats)... But I do have the occasional diet coke and splenda in tea/coffee so I will have to keep my eye out for it.


Cheers
Kat
 
On an additional note....avoid artificial sweetners, they too have their issues. I won't list all the potential problems of each sweetner, but they ALL have their downsides; there's no free-ride folks....and doesn't it bug you a little that ants won't drink the diet stuff??? If their microscopic brains can intuitively figure out and know it's bad for ya, shouldn't that say something???

Hey, good post; but, if you're wondering why ants don't eat artificial sweetener, it's for the same reason we do--it doesn't have the ability to provide energy. Therefore, it contains no calories. I've never seen a fat ant--but, if they do start getting fat, and develop intelligence, maybe they'll consider artificial sweeteners, too.
 
The artificial sweetner is used to make us think it's sweet...seems to work for humans; ant's intuitively know better.

Hey, I went through the public school system....trust me, there are plenty of people are who aren't as smart as an ant! Today we call them Congress. :D
 
BSL your post rings true - I am a great beleiver in the direct link between increase in disease and cancer to be directly linked to corporations mental ability to keep churning all sorts of chemicals into our foods.... sometimes I just feel like buying a farm, a few cows, chickens, pigs and a horse and growing all my food myself....

Its soo hard to escape the chemicals in food these days but at least we can do our best to avoid the junk and stay as natural as possible.

Great post - very informative. Thanks for taking the time.

:D
 
Basically, processed foods will have three types of sweeteners:

1. HCFS: obviously to be avoided. Found in all kinds of foods, including some foods, like whole wheat bread, that we don't think of as "sweet"

2. Sucrose (table sugar): compared to HCFS, this stuff is saintly!

3. Imitation sweeteners (aspartame, Splenda, that nasty pink stuff). The jury is out on these things, but they don't work as well as the above and leave a funny to nasty taste in my mouth.

Generally, if something is "diet" it will be no. 3. If it is organic or if it says, "no additional sugars added" it cannot contain HCFS.

Although you have to sift through the BS you find on the net, here is a link to a peer-reviewed research publication that generally confirms what BSL stated:
 
Mmmm i think i am pretty much in the clear as I dont drink juice or eat chips and candy or cereal (except for organic oats)... But I do have the occasional diet coke and splenda in tea/coffee so I will have to keep my eye out for it.


Cheers
Kat

Thought Diet coke was 0 calorie, and pretty sure it doesn't contain HFCS
And also pretty sure its not in splenda..otherwise chillen wouldn't be eating it.
 
Great Post BSL - excuse my ignorance though can you name a few products that generally carry HFCS?... of course I will be looking out for it on the ingredients panel...

Most sweetened things sold in the US use high fructose corn syrup because it is less expensive than sugar (corn is heavily subsidized in the US; consider Iowa's position in the presidential primaries).

While small amounts of fructose in a package that contains fiber (whole fruit) are not bad, highly concentrated fructose as you would find in sodas sweetened with high fructose corn syrup are a much different story (not that similar concentrations of regular sugar are that great either, though probably not quite as bad as high fructose corn syrup). Fruit juices are disadvantageous compared to whole fruit for similar reasons.
 
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It still amazes me at how many people don't read labels on food they eat! I read every single label, even have my boy doing it now!

HFCS is poison, so sad that so many people still don't understand this. I don't do splenda either, it gives me stomach cramps.
 
Great read BSL. Now you know why I told you diet soda was just as bad as regular.

I'll take wild fish over store bought any day though. You know its fresh, you know what kind of fish it REALLY is and the farm raised crap doesn't have the Omega 3. A little Mercury never hurt anyone. LOL

I do take sweet n low in my coffee. I'm trying to cut that out as well. I read somewhere that artificial sweeteners lower your metabolism and its actually better just to take sugar.

I was also reading about the effects of all these hormones and steriods used on todays farms. Some of that crap is scary stuff.
 
Great read BSL. Now you know why I told you diet soda was just as bad as regular.

Ahhh...I had thought you meant it had the same affect in terms of calories. You were thinking health-wise, I was thinking calorie-wise. The diet stuff is bad for you, but at least it has no calories. Between the two, I'd take diet...but the best choice is neither.

I read somewhere that artificial sweeteners lower your metabolism and its actually better just to take sugar. .

Yeah, I read that too. Each sweetner has it's particular con's. Seems like the food & drug administration figures "well, we can't find or see any short-term problems, so here ya go.....we'll see how this goes 10 years from now or when people start giving birth to kids with major issues". Manufacturers claim it's safe. I believe it's Splenda or some other sweetner that eludes to their product being healthy because it's made from real sugar?

I was also reading about the effects of all these hormones and steriods used on todays farms. Some of that crap is scary stuff.

Sure is. I can't recall the source, but some of these growth hormones are strictly banned in Europe.....but over here, the economy and industries ability to lobby & affect legislation works miracles to secure what's in their interest.
 
What does this mean for the average person?

Well a lot. Since a lot of things happen to have HFCS, it also means that the average person will consume it at least once on a daily basis.

Instead of trying to avoid it, and perhaps missing out on some good food, you should instead try to reduce the consumption. Elimination of a particular food type is ridiculous in my opinion. Living healthy is about understanding rather than eliminating things around you.
 
If your mentally strong, and have reached a point where you have mastered your mind. You wont want to eat any of those foods. Not because they are bad for you, just because you have lost the taste for it. You'd rather load up on veggies and chicken rather than cookies and dessert.

Only then will you have realized you have mastered your mind ;)
 
I was beyond excited to find out that Thomas Bagels took the HFCS out of their 100% whole wheat mini bagels. I am hoping more people will take that step, they also did it with their whole wheat english muffins.

I make a conscious effort to not eat HFCS, it's one of those things that is just soo horrible for you.
 
You know though, given how over the last few years HFCS has gotten a much worse reputation---more and more people now have a very negative view of it, you would think food makers would start going away from it in favor of good ole sugar. When you buy a coke in Mexico, it's sugar, not HFCS. (At least it was in Tijuana when I lived in San Diego.) Why can't we have that here? You would think it would be pretty easy to market that---just put "High Fructose Corn Syrup-free" on the label and lots of people will be interested in it. Not that coke with sucrose is a health drink, but as someone who still enjoys soda pop somewhat regularly, I'd be willing to pay a bit more for something that isn't as bad for me as what we're currently sold. You would think it would be a pretty easy case to make to the American consumer. Honey and real maple syrup are probably too expensive to replace HFCS or sugar in many products, and their tastes might not be compatible in any case, but those are both healthier alternatives to sugar.

Following up on tjl's post---the pandering nature of corn subsudies is definitely a good reason for Iowa to not be the first presidential nominating state. Nothing against Iowa---my wife is from there, but I don't see why everyone else should have to pay people to grow corn.

As bad as HFCS is, to me it doesn't seem as scary as trans-fat. I try to limit HFCS, but I avoid trans-fat in any amount.
 
You would think it would be pretty easy to market that---just put "High Fructose Corn Syrup-free" on the label and lots of people will be interested in it.

I realize you already know this....but let me say it anyways. For most the people on the forum, we know about trans-fat, partially hydrogenated oils, HFCS and other harmful additives, flavorings & preservatives that are wide-spread used in foods today. To us it's a major thing...this is our world, our reality and our interest, but to the majority of the population, it's really not all that important.

I just came from my kids recital at school, looking around the room I took note of all the men in the room: aside from 2-3 other guys, the overwhelming majority of men are overweight, I'd say 10-14 of them have guts about the size of half-volleyballs and then there were about 4-7 guys that we just plain obese. I promise you; none of these guys care, the guys who weren't fat were mostly in good shape from genetics and come from a thin family.

All too often people casually rely on Gov't agencies to act as watch-dog's for our health...they just figure the food & drug administration is taking care of the important stuff. Beyond that, they figure the problem is everywhere: in the air, the water, the environment...blah blah blah, so the problem is so big, what can ya do about it: pass the Snicker's bar, Doritos and hand them a Coke. These are the same idiots who eat a greasy chili-cheeseburger with streak fries and then proclaim "it's okay, I'm on Vitorin"

For those of us who care, there's WholeFoods Market, Trader Joe's and a large Organic section in most markets. Given the choice, most people tend to take the easy path....but life is about choices, so there ya go. :D
 
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