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How to Read Food Labels


Calories on Food Labels


I'm going to show you how to do something that the majority of Americans do incorrectly: Read food labels. You must know how to read food labels to accurately determine how much protein, fat and carb calories you are actually getting per serving.

Getting the correct quantity of protein and carbs is quite easy. You simply take the gram amount listed in the amount per servings column and then multiply that number by 4 (one gram of protein or carbohydrates equals 4 calories). This will give you the total number of protein or carbs per serving. See example below:

EAS PRECISION PROTEIN (Powder)

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size: 1 Scoop or 3 Tablespoons (25.5 grams)

Servings Per Container: 35

Amount

Per Serving

Calories 100

Total Fat 1 g

Cholesterol 15 mg

Total Carbohydrates 2.5 g

Dietary Fiber 0 g

Sugars 2 g

Protein 20 g

Sodium 50 mg

Calcium 50 mg

Magnesium 100 mg

Potassium 80 mg

One scoop of Precision Protein powder will give you 10 calories of carbs (2.5 x 4) per serving, and 80 calories of protein (20 x 4) per serving. Getting the TRUE fat content is a little more tricky.

Because most Americans are so fat conscious, food manufacturers try to give their products more appeal by making them low fat (or at least appear so). When the labels says "low fat", that does not necessarily mean that it is true. When a product says "low fat" it is usually referring to the total fat calorie amount per serving.

So, if a product has one 1 gram of fat, it has a total of 9 calories of fat per serving (one gram of fat equals 9 calories) and can be labeled low fat. Seems ok, right? Well, we don't know yet, since this is not the complete way to determine the actual fat content of the product. To really know if the product is low in fat, you must take into account the TOTAL number of calories per serving that the food provides.

So, if the product has 9 calories of fat per serving and the total calorie amount per serving is 18 calories, then the product is 50% fat per serving. Would anyone who wants low fat foods knowingly eat a food that is 50% fat? Of course not. But people do it all the time because they see it labeled as "low-fat".

To get the true fat amount you must take into account the serving size.

Fortunately, this product is 100 calories per serving, so that means that each serving is 9% fat. This product is actually low in fat, low in carbs and very high in protein.

Here is another example:

Kraft Original Parmesan Cheese

Nutrition Facts

Amount

Per Serving

Calories 20

Total Fat 1.5 g

A regular 8oz container of Kraft Original Parmesan Cheese says on the label that it has 1.5 grams of fat per serving. Seems pretty low, right? Well let's see.

To find out the true fat content, first multiply the number of fat grams (1.5) by 9 to get the number of fat calories per serving (13.5 calories). Then divide that number by the total calories per serving (Calories per serving is 20). This will give you the percentage of fat you get for each serving of this product.

After this calculation, I learn that this cheese is approximately 68% fat. This is not a good product for a low fat diet!

Here's the formula again:

(Total grams of fat per serving) x (9) = Total fat calories per serving

(Total fat calories per serv.) / (calories per serving) = percentage of fat calories per serving

Thanks to a new rule by the FDA to help stop label deception, all food labels should have a new calculation named "calories from fat". This is the first calculation above. Then, to get the percentage of fat for each serving, simply divide that number by the calories per serving (step #2 above).

Food Label Terms

The FDA has created rules regarding the use of certain terms on food labels. To understand what the food actually contains, you must know what these terms mean.

Calorie Terms

"Low Calorie" = Contains no more than 40 calories per serving.

"Reduced Calorie" = Contains 25% fewer calories per serving than regular product

"Calorie-Free" = Contains less than 5 calories per serving

Sodium Terms

"Low Sodium" = Containing 140mg of sodium or less per serving.

"Very Low Sodium" = Containing 35mg of sodium or less per serving.

Fat Terms (non-meat)

"Fat-Free" = Contains no more than 0.5g of fat per serving.

"Low Cholesterol" = Contains no more than 20g of cholesterol and less than 2g of saturated fat per serving.

"Low Fat" = Contains no more than 3g of fat per serving

Fat Terms (meat products)

"Lean" = Contains no more than 10g of fat, no more than 4.5g of which is saturated fat, also contains less than 95mg of cholesterol per serving

"Extra Lean" = Contains no more than 5g of fat, no more than 2g of which is saturated fat, also contains less than 95mg of cholesterol per serving

Other Terms

"Free", "No", "Zero" = Containing no amount, or a trivial amount

"Sugar-Free" = Containing less than 0.5g per serving

"Good Source" = Provides 10%-19% of Daily Value per serving

"Light" = Can mean one of three things:

a) provides 1/3 fewer calories or 1/2 the amount of fat as the regular product per serving

b) if it's a "low fat", "low-calorie" food, it can be called "light" if it provides 1/2 the normal fat present

c) can be referring to the actual color of the food itself


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