Tag Archives: nutrition

Candy and soda for breakfast! The truth about popular children’s breakfast foods.

Breakfast is the most important meal of the day, right? A healthy breakfast can help kids pay attention and do better in school. In adults, a good breakfast can reduce hunger and help with weight control. That’s probably not new.

You may be surprised to learn that many  popular breakfast foods for children—and adults—are anything but healthy. In fact, many of these choices more closely resemble candy and soda than a healthy start to the day!

This is the topic of my Health & Fitness column in the Aiken Standard this week. It was also a project that one of my students, Brittney Austin, worked on this semester. While some of the results clearly showed that some breakfast foods were essentially candy, like frosted Pop-Tarts which have nearly as many calories and as much sugar as a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup.

In other cases, the comparison is more complicated. For example, Sunny D orange drink contains only 5% juice but has as much added sugar as a Coke. It is essentially orange soda without the bubbles. But when you consider that 100% orange juice has as much sugar as the Sunny D, maybe the “orange soda without bubbles”  isn’t so bad.

But it is! While it is true that the sugar content is essentially the same, the real orange juice also contains vitamins and minerals. And  even though some “juice” drinks have added vitamins and minerals, the real juice is still better. Here’s why: children who drink the artificially sweetened juice flavored drinks may become accustomed to the unnaturally sweet taste and find that they don’t like naturally sweetened juice or whole fruit. So even if the nutrients are the same as real juice, the “juice” drinks can lead kids away from eating fruit—a bad outcome!

Take a close look at what your children eat for breakfast. Is it a healthy meal or candy and soda in disguise? And take a good look at your own breakfast. It may not be much better!

Thug Kitchen: Nutrition advice you can use, gangsta version.

One of the problems with making nutrition recommendations is that the information is often either too complicated for people to understand or it isn’t delivered in simple, compelling message. Problem solved!

A friend sent me this link this morning. I thought it was funny, creative, and (mostly) correct. Fair warning, it is R-rated for language, so look over your shoulder to make sure your kids or your boss aren’t looking before you click:

Thug Kitchen

 

A real happy meal for kids

My family happened to be in Earthfare the other evening and discovered a really healthy meal option for kids.

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The main meal options all seem kid-friendly and come with healthy sides including fruit salad, veggies, and bottled water. This is far better than the burgers and fried chicken nuggets that are the norm in most kid’s meals. And while some fast food restaurants offer fruit and veggies as options, French fries are typically the norm.

The price, at $3.99, is comparable to kids meals elsewhere, including a Happy Meal at McDonalds. Even better, we were there on a Thursday, so kids ate for free!

All around, this was a much happier kids meal than we could have found most anyplace else.