SUGAR Shocker What’s in YOUR breakfast cereal?
Sensory Evaluation Which has more SUGAR.. The cereal or the chocolate bar?
One teaspoon of sugar = 4 grams!! A package that lists 26 grams of sugar for one serving means you are really getting 6 teaspoons of SUGAR!
Less Sugar, More Fruit U.S. researchers randomly assigned 91 children aged 5 to 12 to choose one of three low-sugar cereals (Cheerios, Corn Flakes or Rice Krispies) or one of three high-sugar cereals (Cocoa Puffs, Fruit Loops or Frosted Flakes). The kids also had unlimited access to low-fat milk, orange juice, bananas, strawberries, and packets of sugar.
Less Sugar, More Fruit Roughly half (54%) of the children who got a low-sugar cereal -- but only 8 percent of those who got a high sugar cereal – put fresh fruit on top.
Less Sugar, More Fruit Those who ate a high-sugar cereal ended up downing twice as much added sugar per breakfast than those who ate a low-sugar cereal, even when researchers added in the sugar that the kids got from any sugar packets they used.
Less Sugar, More Fruit Children who ate a high-sugar cereal also ended up eating MORE cereal (about two servings, vs. slightly more than one serving for children who ate a low-sugar cereal).
What Do You Think? Why should parents be concerned about the amount of sugar in their children’s breakfast cereal?