Categories: Camp TipsFood 301

Cherry Picking Packaged Foods: How to Avoid Inferior Products

How can you tell if the company is trying to sell you an inferior product when it is dressed in so many health claims? Food labels assert healthful claims on packaged products to get you to purchase them. Knowing what to look for in the ingredient list lets you quickly determine how worthy it is. There is so much conflicting information out there. How do you know who to believe?

Most people with special dietary needs are adept at reading labels to determine if the food contains hidden ingredients or allergens. Even those without dietary restrictions are becoming more interested in understanding food ingredients. There appears to be an increasing interest in healthier eating, and identifying “healthy” starts with learning how to read a food label.

How to determine what packaged foods are good

1. Read the Ingredient List

The ingredient lists the food item’s components and must be printed on all packaging by order of decreasing weight. Thus, the first 3 – 4 ingredients make up most of the food and matter the most. Ensure you scan all ingredients (see #3 – ingredient fraud). If you want to purchase an online product that fails to disclose the ingredients on the site, check with the manufacturer directly. If the manufacturer doesn’t offer the details, don’t buy it.

2. Learn Ingredients

Don’t know what the ingredient is? Pick up a copy of a food dictionary such as “A Consumer’s Guide to Food Additives” by Ruth Winter.

Common Food Ingredients to Avoid:

  • Saturated Fat. Processed animal proteins, such as hot dogs and jerky, contain a host of chemical preservatives and high sodium. Promotes heart disease and cancer.
  • Trans Fat. Identify by any of these words: “partially hydrogenated,” “fractionated,” or “hydrogenated. Promotes heart disease, nervous system disorders, and tumor growth.
  • Refined Carbohydrates. Identify by “refined” or “enriched.” Promotes diabetes, obesity, and nutrient loss.
  • High Fructose Corn Syrup. Identify also by “corn syrup solids”, “corn sweetener,” and “corn syrup.
  • Flavor Enhancers. Monosodium glutamate (MSG), hydrolyzed soy protein, autolyzed yeast extract, disodium guanylate, or inosinate.
  • Artificial Flavors, Colors, Sweeteners, and Preservatives. Sulfites, Nitrites, Nitrates, Monosodium glutamate (MSG), FD&C colors, Carmine, Aspartame, Saccharin, BHA, BHT, and BHQT.
  • Fat Replacements – Olestra, carrageenan, polydextrose, and modified food starch.
  • Food/Drinks labeled “Diet,” “Low-Fat,” “No-Fat,” or “Reduced-Fat.” These foods use additives, unhealthy fillers, artificial flavors, and sweeteners to imitate the original. It is better to purchase the full-fat food product.
  • Flavors and Spices. Be suspicious of a food item that uses this blanket term. It should list out the specific spice or flavor.

3. Identify Ingredient Fraud

Consumers often check the first three ingredients to judge a food item since these comprise the bulk of the food. Companies know consumers do this and distribute substances they realize you don’t want by substituting some or all of these components with similar substances. These “bad” items are now distributed, so they are not present in large enough quantities to qualify for a top position on the ingredient list. This is a common tactic with sugar and wheat.

Finding Sugar

Low-quality packaged food is mostly sugar and it is not always easy to spot. Manufacturers will mix up different types of sugars, such as corn syrup solids, high-fructose corn syrup, brown rice syrup, molasses, date crystals, maple syrup, malt syrup, caramel, sucrose, dextrose, glucose, fructose, maltodextrin, evaporated cane juice, fruit juice concentrate, barley malt, sorbitol, maltol, manitol, honey, lactose, maltose, and many more. This ploy shifts sugar farther down the ingredients list and makes it appear that sugar is a small part of the overall product when it is not. So, if you are looking for the word “sugar” in the first few ingredients, you won’t notice these unless you 1) know all the terms for sugar and 2) read the entire ingredient list. If the ingredient list is exceedingly long (more than 12 items) for what seems a simple product (i.e., bread), the manufacturer is likely using this hike-and-seek tactic.

4. Misleading Food Titles

The title of the food is no guarantee of what is inside. For instance, a packet of guacamole dip sounds like it must contain dried avocado, but no avocado is on the ingredient list. Instead, the packet lists hydrogenated soybean solids, flavor enhancers, and green food coloring. Why? Foods that contain primarily fat, such as avocado, cannot be successfully dried. The title “Artificial Avocado Dip” may be more appropriate, but who wants to buy that?

Another example is vegetable powder. You may expect ground dehydrated vegetables, but instead, find corn syrup solids (HFCS) and autolyzed yeast extract (MSG) as the primary ingredients. The title “Corn Sugar & MSG” might be more appropriate.

Salsa mix sounds delicious and convenient until you read the main ingredient is neither a vegetable nor herb but maltodextrin (sugar).

Read and understand the ingredients and decide what is best for you. It is not by accident that the ingredient list is printed in microscopic print on the back of most products.

5. Ignore Marketing Claims

Many packaged foods lie! The words prominently printed on the front are to ENTICE consumers. The label’s objective on packaged food is to sell the product rather than tell you the list of ingredients. Words that claim great taste or market “Wholesome”, “All natural”, “No artificial…”, “Residue free”, “Naturally Grown”, “Hormone free”, “Healthy source of …, “Nutritious”, and so on. All these statements are loosely enforced (if at all) by the FDA/USDA, so companies do take advantage of this right.

For example, bread marketed as “made with wheat flour” or “multigrain” is often made with white flour “enriched” bread. The crust may contain a sprinkle of oats or seeds to look healthy. The bread may also be colored brown (by adding browning agents, molasses, brown sugar, or high fructose corn syrup) to appear more nutritious. Most consumers judge the healthiness of a food by its color, and “brown” is perceived as healthier.

6. Ignore Pictures

Be suspicious when you see a picture on the front of the food package with the agrarian landscape dotted with happy farm animals. This scene eludes that we are holding a product delicately produced in a gentle land of green pastures and peace, not a massive factory filled with noise and machinery gulping, churning, spewing, chugging, and stamping product by the thousand. The product may boast that it is carefully produced in “small” batches or even handled or mixed by non-robotic arms to clear your mind of giant factories. If you buy this product in a big box chain store, do you think that is possible? Consider reading the ingredients carefully..

7. Identify Whole Grains

Products that may contain whole grains include breads, cereal, crackers, and pasta.  To find what is actually a whole grain, look for the word “whole”.  A product marketed as multi-grain or wheat is not whole unless the word “whole” appears in the ingredient list.  Whether the grain is wheat, oats, rye, brown rice, the word “whole” should be included as the first or second ingredient.  Food labeled “wheat flour” is not whole grain unless it is labeled “whole grain wheat flour.”   See also tips to identify whole grains from the whole grains council.

Whole grain pasta and bread are nutritionally superior to enriched or white flour counterparts and have a more robust flavor. Whole-grain pasta made without gluten, such as brown rice, quinoa, and buckwheat, is particularly tasty.

8. Clean Ingredients

The chemical contaminants used in growing plants and animals as food, such as pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, fertilizers, genetically modified organisms, growth enhancers, hormones, and antibiotics, are not disclosed on ingredient lists. To ingest clean ingredients, look for organic or minimally processed ingredients. Organic products can not use harmful synthetic chemical additives. Learn what foods are most important to purchase organically.

Purchasing organic products protects you more than yourself. It helps protect wildlife and the environment it depends on from chemical contamination.

Next time you pick up a packaged food item, look at the label and then read the ingredient list. Is the label telling you the truth?

Related Posts:

Outdoor Herbivore

Recent Posts

Berry Chia Zinger: A Easy, No Cook Backpacking Breakfast Recipe

Prepare this flavorful mix for a portable, no-cook breakfast for when you want to hit…

September 7

Mujadara Recipe: A Simple Backpacking Meal Mix with Lentils & Rice

This recipe doesn't require cooking and dehydrating. Instead, this recipe uses instant dried ingredients that…

September 7

Best Backpacking Meals for Vegetarians

Hikers often ask, "What are your best backpacking meals?" These are Outdoor Herbivore's customer favorites.…

July 1

Fueling the Firefight: Meeting the Energy Demands for Wildland Firefighters

Wildland firefighting, a role that demands immense physical and mental strength, requires careful meal planning.…

June 23

On the Go Garbanzo: A Quick & Easy Backpacking Lunch

We are often asked, "What's new for the season?" We're excited to introduce our newest…

May 30

Purchasing Freeze-Dried Backpacking Meals for Your First Backpacking Trip

If you are new to the world of backpacking and freeze-dried meals, one of the…

February 14