Posts Tagged ‘sugar’

Stevia, The Most Promising, Talked About Sugar

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Following our post on GM sugar beets, it was time we wrote about a new, promising, natural sweetener called rebiana (or Rebaudioside A, also known as Reb A). It is a high-intensity sweetener derived from the stevia leaf which grows in South East Asia (mostly Vietnam, Thailand, China…) and South America (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Peru…). In December 2008, Reb A was generally recognized as safe (GRAS) as a food additive, whose safety was recently evidenced by a study published in the Food and Chemical Toxicology (April 2009).

Lately, the potential of stevia sweeteners as mainstream sugar replacers and diet-related product has been largely discussed:

  • Stevia-derived Reb A is a high intensity sweetener, it is 200 times sweeter than sugar.
  • It has a negligible glycemic index (little to no effect on blood glucose).
  • This sweetener has zero-calorie.
  • It can be used to replace up to 20% of sugar in a product.
  • It is GMO-free

While Reb A will find many useful applications in diabetic-related diets or low-calorie products, it is also considered a cost effective alternative to sugar, on par with the $0.77 per kilo cost of sugar. This will be possible provided the market develops and creates economies of scale as important supply chain investments are expected to encourage large scale penetration of the market by Reb A, according to major Reb A supplier PureCircle.

We look forward to sourcing new zero-calorie, all natural Reb A sweetened chocolates for you when they become available. We are committed to growing our offering of healthy chocolates.

The future of sugar that is not Genetically Modified?

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

It is not good.

Sugar beet and sugar cane are the principal sources of the sugar we consume, apart from “corn syrup” which is used extensively in processed foods. Sugar beet alone makes up more than half of the entire North American sugar crop value and North America is one of the world’s largest producer of sugar and sugar products.

As of this year, all sugar beet crops throughout the United States and Canada are now grown ”GMO”,or genetically engineered, a move deemed necessary to compete with foreign suppliers and despite heavy government subsidies. It is a direction suggested and approved by the USDA.

That is the story of an entire industry. In the absence of general public knowledge and without much assurance as to long term health effects, a revolution has taken place that governs a basic staple of the everyman diet. No longer do we have a choice in the matter and we should be vigilant that the same type of attitude does not prevail when it comes to other basic foods…tomatoes? oranges? beef?

The subject of genetically modified food crops needs to be on front pages to get the public to become involved and behind a topic that should be of great concern to all of us.