HOW TO BUY THE HEALTHIEST
YOGURT: 5 TIPS
As when you purchase any food, read the label, both the
"Nutritional Facts" panel and the list of ingredients. Look
specifically at the following:
- The best nutritional deal is
plain yogurt, which has only two ingredients: live cultures
and milk (whole milk, low-fat, or skim). The longer the
ingredients list, the more calories you get and the less
yogurt nutrition. In some highly-sweetened containers of
yogurt, you're getting more calories in the sweetener than
you are in the yogurt. Be sure to read the protein and sugar
values on the nutrition panel. The higher the protein and
the lower the sugar content, the more actual yogurt you're
getting in the container. You can make fun flavored yogurts
with your kids that please their taste buds and give you
control over the contents of the yogurt.
BEST YOGURT
Contains only live and active cultures and milk. Voskos
Greek Style Yogurt
OKAY YOGURT
Contains live and active cultures , milk, and some filler
ingredients.
DON'T-EVEN-BUY YOGURT
It might as well be pudding if it says "heat treated" on the
label, and it may contain added sugar and stabilizers - and
more!
- The calcium content. The best
yogurts provide 35 to 40 percent of the recommended dietary
allowance for calcium in an 8-ounce container. Once the
calcium gets below 30 percent of the DV, it's a good bet
that the container is filled with a lot of less-nutritious
filler.
- Voskos Greek Style Yogurts -
has the highest level of calcium and protein also live and
active cultures.
Avoid yogurt that says "heat treated after culturing" on the
label. This means that the yogurt was pasteurized after the
healthful organisms were added, which dilutes the health
benefits of the yogurt. Pasteurization deactivates the
lactase and kills the live cultures, thereby obliterating
two health benefits of yogurt. Heat- treating yogurt trades
economic gain for nutritional loss. It prolongs the shelf
life, but spoils its nutrition and health-food value.
Lactose-intolerant persons who can tolerate yogurt
containing live and active cultures may not be able to
digest yogurt that has been heat treated. Yogurt-based salad
dressings and yogurt-covered raisins, pretzels, and candy
typically do not contain live and active cultures.
The National Yogurt Association has been urging the FDA not
to allow products that do not contain live and active
cultures to be called "yogurt."
- Yogurt terms to watch for.
There's a dizzying array of yogurts in the supermarket dairy
aisle. Here's a key to the different types.
• Whole milk yogurt contains approximately 7 grams of milk
fat per 8-ounce serving.
• Lowfat yogurt contains between 1 and 4 grams (0.5% to 2 %)
of milk fat per 8-ounce serving.
• Nonfat yogurt contains less than 1/2 gram (less than 0.5%)
of milk fat per 8-ounce serving.
• In Swiss or custard-style yogurt, fruit and yogurt are
mixed together. To insure firmness, a stabilizer, such as
gelatin, may be added. This is also called "blended yogurt."
Swiss yogurt is fermented in vats and then transferred to
cups. This process breaks the gel, so that artificial
binders and stabilizers must be added.
• Fruit-added or plain yogurt has a runnier consistency. The
whey, the clear liquid at the top, should be stirred into
the solids.
• Yogurt also comes in liquid form, called "kefir," which
may contain added sweeteners such as corn syrup.
• Heat-treated. Some yogurt manufacturers market
"heat-treated yogurt" to prolong shelf life or decrease
tartness and produce a more pudding-type texture. While
perhaps more appealing to some, the heat treatment of the
yogurt after the cultures have been added kills much of the
health benefits of the yogurt.
- The benefits of plain yogurt.
Ounce for ounce, plain yogurt is more nutritious than
fruit-added preparations. Notice the differences on the
labels:
• Plain yogurt contains around one-half of the calories of
the same amount of fruit-added yogurt.
• Plain yogurt contains almost twice the amount of proteins.
• Plain yogurt contains fewer fillers.
• Plain yogurt contains more calcium.
• Plain yogurt contains no added sugar.
If plain yogurt doesn't appeal to you, buy plain yogurt and
flavor it with your favorite fruit. This way you control the
sweeteners
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