1 Sports Drinks Water Best for 90-minute Competitions Sports Drinks Have Value after 90 Minutes Rebalance Electrolytes, Carbohydrates and Sodium Choose 8% Total Solids Check for High Sugar Content
2 Energy Drinks Not Good Choice for Athletes Caffeine Content Can Dehydrate Athlete Caffeine-Sugar Jolt Leads to Crash Despite Vitamins, Not Nutrition Value
3 Fruit Juice Choose 100% Juice, No Sugar Added Contains Natural Sugar Serving Size – 6 ounces Two Servings Per Day =
4 Watch Out for Juice Imposters Read Labels for Clues Fruit Cocktail or Punch Not Juice 10% Juice Is Not Juice =
5 Smoothie Options Commercial Smoothie Calories and 16 tsps. Sugar Healthy Smoothie Ingredients Fresh or Frozen Fruit, Low- fat Milk or Yogurt, Ice
6 Iced Tea Commercial Ice Teas High in Sugar Choose Black or Green Teas Avoid Sweeteners
7 Coffee Drinks Check the Calories Double Mocha Frappucino with Whipped Cream 500 Calories and 16 tsps of Sugar Tall Cappucino with Skimmed Milk 100 calories
8 Milk Healthy Beverage Choice Contains Vitamins and Minerals Drink up to 3 Cups a Day Choose Low-fat Products Balance with Other Dairy Servings
9 Flavored Milk Popular Milk Product Fun Flavors Food or Beverage?
10 A Beverage Comparison Nutrients Sugar (tsp) Calories Choc Milk (8 oz) Fat, protein, calcium, vitamins A, C, D Fruit Punch (8 oz) None Soda (12 oz can) None
11 Water Water Is the Very Best Thirst Quencher Water Has Zero Calories Water Carries Nutrients Through the Body Water Is the Key to Hydration
12 Water in Schools Schools Ban Soda Machines Water for Sale in Schools Bottles Target Kids
13 Make Water Interesting Add Fruit Slices Top with Juice Splash Use Juice Ice Cubes Try Carbonated Water
14 Obesity in a Bottle Review Child and Teen Obesity Rises Soda – Obesity/Bone Loss Link Diet Soda Can Backfire Beware Performance Drinks Fancy Drinks Have Fancy Calories
15 Obesity in a Bottle Review Put Milk on Your Menu Choose 100% Juice Drink Water, Water Everywhere
16 What Did You Learn? Heart Disease and Diabetes. 10 Teaspoons. A corn based sweetener. Sports drink – fluid replacement. Energy drink – stimulant. It may not satisfy hunger. Imposter. Has only 10% fruit juice. It’s a non-caloric thirst quencher that hydrates the body and carries nutrients through the body. 7. Why is water a nutritional bargain? 6. Fruit punch: juice or imposter? 5. How can diet soda cause weight gain? 3. What is High Fructose Corn Syrup? 2. How much sugar is in a 12 oz. can of soda? 1. Obesity contributes to what diseases? 4. Sports drinks and energy drinks: the difference?
17 Apply What You’ve Learned Complete one of the following activities: Research a “healthy” and an “unhealthy” beverage choice. – Make a chart comparing sugar content, calories, nutrients, etc. Research the health benefits of milk. – Create a poster. Find healthy smoothie recipes. – Try making a few.
18 Web Resources USDA’s Dietary Guidelines for Americans American Beverage Association Centers For Disease Control and Prevention American Diabetes Association