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How Much Sugar?

How much fructose / day

  • 19 Aug 2011 5:16 AM
    Reply # 679827 on 673771
    Deleted user
    say 3g per 100g, to my reckoning is 3%, say 10g per 100 will be 10%, same if it is in mls.
  • 20 Aug 2011 10:23 PM
    Reply # 681136 on 673771
    Deleted user
    Kirsty, just look at the Nutritional Panel, on the far right is the 'per 100 gram' listings. This is what you should be looking at. It will say, on the left, sugars, follow to the last column, and it will say, eg 10.8 g (or mls if a liquid), That means it is 10.8% of the total. Ie the whole product is 10.8% sugar. Halve that, then you know it's got 5.4% fructose. So, if the amount in the column on the far right is above 6g, then don't buy it, unless you then look at the ingredients & find that some of it is lactose. You then have to work it out yourself.

    Hope this helps a bit.

    I do wish all you newbies a lot of luck. You can do it, it does get better as you go along, just don't obsess about it all, it is not a diet, it's a way of life. And you should be able to stay on it the rest of your life.

    Bye for now
    Silver Angel
    Spread the Love

    SMILE!
    Last modified: 20 Aug 2011 10:24 PM | Deleted user
  • 10 Sep 2011 2:42 AM
    Reply # 695909 on 679827
    Deleted user
    Craig Wilkin wrote:say 3g per 100g, to my reckoning is 3%, say 10g per 100 will be 10%, same if it is in mls.

    Hi Craig
    Another person new to the counting of sugars in foods and also confused after reading the books, do you take the figure in the right hand column for sugars on the nutrional panel and halve it to get to the 3gms figure?, or do you mean that rhs figure should be 3gms. 

    Marg

  • 10 Sep 2011 4:25 AM
    Reply # 695923 on 695909
    Deleted user
    Brian Bird wrote:
    Craig Wilkin wrote:say 3g per 100g, to my reckoning is 3%, say 10g per 100 will be 10%, same if it is in mls.

    Hi Craig
    Another person new to the counting of sugars in foods and also confused after reading the books, do you take the figure in the right hand column for sugars on the nutrional panel and halve it to get to the 3gms figure?, or do you mean that rhs figure should be 3gms. 

    Marg


    The RHS figure should be 3 grms.
    cheers
    Freda
  • 10 Sep 2011 8:33 AM
    Reply # 695976 on 673771
    Anonymous

    So when they say 10g of fructose per day, same as in 2 pieces of fruit, does that mean if you don't have fruit or if you do have fruit ie does that mean the 10g is inclusive or exclusive of the fruit?  That's why I've never added up my fructose, because I don't understand what they mean by that.

     

  • 11 Sep 2011 3:17 AM
    Reply # 696554 on 681136
    Deleted user
    Sylvia Liney wrote:Kirsty, just look at the Nutritional Panel, on the far right is the 'per 100 gram' listings. This is what you should be looking at. It will say, on the left, sugars, follow to the last column, and it will say, eg 10.8 g (or mls if a liquid), That means it is 10.8% of the total. Ie the whole product is 10.8% sugar. Halve that, then you know it's got 5.4% fructose. So, if the amount in the column on the far right is above 6g, then don't buy it, unless you then look at the ingredients & find that some of it is lactose. You then have to work it out yourself.

    Hope this helps a bit.

    I do wish all you newbies a lot of luck. You can do it, it does get better as you go along, just don't obsess about it all, it is not a diet, it's a way of life. And you should be able to stay on it the rest of your life.

    Bye for now
    Silver Angel
    Spread the Love

    SMILE!

    Hi Sylvia

    I'm very new and very confused....when you get the rhs figure for sugar on the nutritional panel do you halve that to get the true sugar content...ie if the figure is 6 does that mean the safe sugar count is 3

    many thanks for all your help

    Margaret
     

  • 11 Sep 2011 8:49 AM
    Reply # 696645 on 696554
    Deleted user
    Brian Bird wrote:
    Sylvia Liney wrote:Kirsty, just look at the Nutritional Panel, on the far right is the 'per 100 gram' listings. This is what you should be looking at. It will say, on the left, sugars, follow to the last column, and it will say, eg 10.8 g (or mls if a liquid), That means it is 10.8% of the total. Ie the whole product is 10.8% sugar. Halve that, then you know it's got 5.4% fructose. So, if the amount in the column on the far right is above 6g, then don't buy it, unless you then look at the ingredients & find that some of it is lactose. You then have to work it out yourself.

    Hope this helps a bit.

    I do wish all you newbies a lot of luck. You can do it, it does get better as you go along, just don't obsess about it all, it is not a diet, it's a way of life. And you should be able to stay on it the rest of your life.

    Bye for now
    Silver Angel
    Spread the Love

    SMILE!

    Hi Sylvia

    I'm very new and very confused....when you get the rhs figure for sugar on the nutritional panel do you halve that to get the true sugar content...ie if the figure is 6 does that mean the safe sugar count is 3

    many thanks for all your help

    Margaret
     


    Hello Margaret
    If it says 6gms sugar per 100 gms on the nutritional  panel, then it is too much, way too much. David's recommendation is: maximum 3gms of sugar in the product, this doesn't mean you halve anything, it means 3 gms of sugar or below is the safe amount.
    Last modified: 11 Sep 2011 8:51 AM | Deleted user
  • 12 Sep 2011 5:10 AM
    Reply # 697122 on 673771
    Deleted user
    Nadine, the 10g is inclusive :) So regardless of what you eat, you can only have up to 10g (though for me, this is way too much). The 2 pieces of fruit may be misleading - there's heaps more fructose in some than others. Sometimes some research is needed to find out how much is generally in that piece.
  • 16 Sep 2011 7:07 AM
    Reply # 701409 on 673771
    Deleted user
    I'm soooo confused now, after reading A LOT of threads I thought it was if the right hand column said 6 g or under it was "safe" because you halve the amount which would equal 3 or less.
    Now you're saying you can only have something that has less than 3g sugar??

    David perhaps you could clarify this as everyone is giving different answers to everyone, if it's under 3 g's full stop there's not much you would be able to have.

    I thought I was very clever as the Greek yoghurt brand has some sugar free sweet yoghurts out where none of the were over the 5.8g /100 so I thought given the lactose in the yoghurt it would be okay, but now I don't know??

    Cheers

    Kylie
  • 16 Sep 2011 7:36 AM
    Reply # 701415 on 673771
    Deleted user
    Hi everyone, New to this - have been supposedly diagnosed a "diabetic 2" but find it difficult to believe as I am not overweight have no history of diabeties on either side of my family and don't eat rubbish like takeaways and fizzy drinks.  My husband is a type 2 and has a glucometer and I have been monitoring my blood sugar and indeed I throw a BGL of 13 or so when I eat high carbs and sugar.  So I have completly eliminated sugar from my diet ie no added sugar and no cakes, bikkies etc.  i am very strict with myself and have lost about 9 kilos since April ie 5 months but the weight  came off in about 6 weeks and has stabilized.  I have just read about Type 3 diabeties and am curious now, has anyone been actually diagnosed with this or is it just part of diabeties 1 as they say it is a hybrid.  I was reading somewhere recently that radio waves and electromagnetic fields and microwaves can cause type 3.  Does anyone know anything about this phenomenon? Cheers everyone and don't give up, keep researching..........
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