I thought I had finally found a healthy drink I liked with no artificial sweetness and they had to go and fuck it up

  • @[email protected]
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    195 days ago

    It’s a US label and the percents are % of recommended daily intake. So that’s 3% of your daily recommended carbohydrate intake, 6% of your daily recommended intake of sugar, and 12% of your daily recommended intake of “added” sugar. The recommendation is something like, no more than half of your carbs should come from sugar, and no more than half of those should be added during manufacturing (i.e. most of your sugar intake should be from fresh fruit, etc.). So the numbers do line up.

    • @[email protected]
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      5 days ago

      In reality there is no recommended sugar intake. We can do perfectly well with zero grams of sugar every single day for a whole life, without it causing a single health issue.
      So the label remains nonsense.

      There is a recommended intake of vegetables and fruit, but not for sugar. Not by any factual based health measure.

      • @[email protected]
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        135 days ago

        You would have a point if the recommendation was a minimum daily intake. It’s not. It is a maximum. A recommended limit that you should not exceed.

        The USDA recommendation is that sugar should make up no more than 10% of total caloric intake. The percentages you see are based on a 2000 (kilo)calorie daily diet.

        That recommendation is perfectly consistent with your assertion that “we can do perfectly well with zero grams of sugar every single day”.

        • @[email protected]
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          5 days ago

          It is a maximum. A recommended limit that you should not exceed.

          Ah OK that makes better sense.

          But that’s not the same as a “daily recommendation” which was what GBU_28 wrote, and I responded to.

          it’s percent of daily recommendation.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 days ago

        This is exactly why, for many years, there was no percentage on the label. They were concerned that people would try to get it to 100%.

        Fast forward a few decades, and it’s extremely rare to find Americans consuming that little sugar, so the concern was no longer valid.