Oatmeal labels

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Oatmeal labels

Postby SactoBob » Tue Mar 11, 2008 10:07 am

Jeff.
Thank you for the excellent video on reading labels - I had no idea of all the loopholes.

I am trying to figure out an apparent discrepancy re: oatmeal labels.

Country Choice Oven Toasted Oats.
Calories 150
Calories from Fat 25
Ingredients: Organic Whole Grain Rolled Oats
Serving Size 40g
Total Fat 3g
Saturated Fat .5g
Polyunsaturated Fat 1g
Monosaturated Fat 1g

The same companies "Steel Cut" oats has 0 sat fat, 1 poly, and 1 mono.
Quaker Oats has only 15 calories from fat, .5 each of saturated, poly, and mono.

Since all of these have the same ingredient (Just oats), are these differences significant, and where do they come from? Is it possible that the Oven Toasted Oats where toasted with a little oil, but so little that they don't have to list it as an ingredient.

I am being pretty skeptical of everything now, which is a good thing.
Thanks
SactoBob
 

Re: Oatmeal labels

Postby JeffN » Tue Mar 11, 2008 11:03 am

Hi Bob,


SactoBob wrote:Jeff.
Thank you for the excellent video on reading labels - I had no idea of all the loopholes.


Thank you. As I say, the IRS tax code is easier to understand than the FDA Food label.

SactoBob wrote:The same companies "Steel Cut" oats has 0 sat fat, 1 poly, and 1 mono.
Quaker Oats has only 15 calories from fat, .5 each of saturated, poly, and mono.

Since all of these have the same ingredient (Just oats), are these differences significant, and where do they come from? Is it possible that the Oven Toasted Oats where toasted with a little oil, but so little that they don't have to list it as an ingredient.


You will see a lot of this if you look closely.

It is all because of rounding and no, none of it is significant in a product that contains only whole oats. There is a lee way allowed in serving sizes and rounding, so there is no simple one answer and has to do with the product and how they analyzed it or submitted it.

For the record, and not to make things worse, but if you go the USDA SR 20, the standard reference used for nutritional analysis, you will see many of the same discrepancies. They give you some of the justification for the discepeancies here

http://www.ars.usda.gov/Services/docs.htm?docid=8964

and more specifically here

http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/D ... 20_doc.pdf

Not to open another can or worms, but realize that the 4 calorie per gram of carb or protein and the 9 calorie per gram of fat, is not always what they use.

The good news is that this is an incredible database and our food label, in spite of all its flaws, is the best in the world.

The bad news is there are many loopholes and some discrepancies.

What this means to me is that I can use all this info to my benefit to try and make some sense out of what I am buying and what I am eating and what I am getting in from the food, in comparison to what my goals are.

However, I also realize that to try and overly micromanage these issues is futile due to the amount of discrepancies and loopholes.

Of course, we have not even begun to address all the issues that effect each nutrient and the absorption and metabolism of it. :)


SactoBob wrote:I am being pretty skeptical of everything now, which is a good thing. Thanks


If that is all you got our of my video, then you got the most valuable point.

We have to get back to thinking critically about the information we are presented.

I like to think of myself as a "skeptical believer." I am more than happy to be convinced of anything and to beleive in it. But, at first, I am going to be skeptical and want to be convinced.

In Health
Jeff Novick, MS, RD
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Postby Jaggu » Tue Mar 11, 2008 11:16 am

OK, Let me too be skeptical instead of assuming :-)

On many lables, under ingredients you will find something like, contains less than 2% of ( X, Y, Z)

What does it mean? Does it mean that it is 2%(x+y+z)? or it is 2% X +2% Y + 2% Z)?

I'm guessing it is former but just want to be sure.

If it said 2% of each of (X,Y, Z) then the 2nd part will apply . Just want to make sure.
Jaggu
 

Postby JeffN » Tue Mar 11, 2008 11:37 am

Jaggu wrote:OK, Let me too be skeptical instead of assuming :-)

On many lables, under ingredients you will find something like, contains less than 2% of ( X, Y, Z)

What does it mean? Does it mean that it is 2%(x+y+z)? or it is 2% X +2% Y + 2% Z)?

I'm guessing it is former but just want to be sure.

If it said 2% of each of (X,Y, Z) then the 2nd part will apply . Just want to make sure.



From

http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/c ... Search.cfm

http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/c ... Search.cfm

( you have to search under CFR section 21 part 101)

TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
SUBCHAPTER B--FOOD FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

PART 101 -- FOOD LABELING

Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 101.4 Food; designation of ingredients.

(2) The descending order of predominance requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this section do not apply to ingredients present in amounts of 2 percent or less by weight when a listing of these ingredients is placed at the end of the ingredient statement following an appropriate quantifying statement, e.g., "Contains _ percent or less of ___" or "Less than _ percent of ___." The blank percentage within the quantifying statement shall be filled in with a threshold level of 2 percent, or, if desired, 1.5 percent, 1.0 percent, or 0.5 percent, as appropriate. No ingredient to which the quantifying phrase applies may be present in an amount greater than the stated threshold.


PS: I told you, the IRS Taxcode is easier to understand and has less loopholes.

:)

In Health
Jeff Novick, MS, RD
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Postby Jaggu » Tue Mar 11, 2008 4:26 pm

Jeff wrote: No ingredient to which the quantifying phrase applies may be present in an amount greater than the stated threshold.
[/i]

PS: I told you, the IRS Taxcode is easier to understand and has less loopholes.

:)

In Health
Jeff Novick, MS, RD


It looks like each of those ingredients could be upto 1.99% (if it said, contains less than 2 % of (x,y,z)
Jaggu
 


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