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Consumers shouldn’t discount Processed Foods
in quest to lose weight
Newswise, June 20, 2011--Consumers should
divide their daily grain servings between
whole and refined varieties to avoid missing
out on the important health benefits of
both, according to experts at a symposium
Tuesday during the 2011 Institute of Food
Technologists (IFT) Annual Meeting & Food
Expo®.
The 2010 Dietary Guidelines, which form the
basis for the MyPlate icon unveiled this
month, call for Americans to make sure half
their daily grain intake is whole grains.
Whole grains protect against cardiovascular
disease, obesity and type 2 diabetes, and
are essential for optimal digestive health.
During the symposium, Julie Miller Jones,
PhD, LN, CNS, professor emeritus at St.
Catherine University, said it’s also
important to add refined grains into a
healthy diet because of the benefits added
during to some products during the
manufacturing process.
For example, folic acid was added to cereal,
bread and other grains beginning in 1999,
and since then there has been a 46 percent
decrease in neural tube defects among
newborns.
She also noted that some nutrients, such as
iron and copper, are more difficult to
absorb when they are eaten in whole grains
instead of refined grains.
Joanne Slavin, PhD, RD, a professor in the
department of food science and nutrition at
the University of Minnesota, shared her
experiences as part of the group that
drafted the guidelines. She said fiber is
listed as a “nutrient of concern” because
almost all Americans – 95 percent of adults
and children –average only 15 grams of fiber
per day, far less than the recommended 21-38
grams for most adults and 19-38 grams for
children ages 1-18.
She encouraged consumers who choose refined
grains to make sure they fall within the
healthy guidelines and do not contain solid
fats, added sugars or sodium.
“Fiber is a shortfall nutrient, so we need
to increase it across the board,” Dr. Slavin
said. “Grains have a quarter of the plate.
We still accept carbohydrates and refined
grains and whole grains as part of that
picture.”
For more information about the MyPlate
initiative, including customized food plans,
visit www.ChooseMyPlate.gov.
###
About IFT
The Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) is
a nonprofit scientific society. Our
individual members are professionals engaged
in food science, food technology, and
related professions in industry, academia,
and government. IFT's mission is to advance
the science of food, and our long-range
vision is to ensure a safe and abundant food
supply, contributing to healthier people
everywhere.
For more than 70 years, the IFT has been
unlocking the potential of the food science
community by creating a dynamic global forum
where members from more than 100 countries
can share, learn, and grow. We champion the
use of sound science across the food value
chain through the exchange of knowledge, by
providing education, and by furthering the
advancement of the profession. IFT has
offices in Chicago, Illinois and Washington,
D.C. For more information, please visit ift.org.
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