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welcome to todays diabetic sesame street

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This thread is now closed. Please contact Anna DUK, Ieva DUK or everydayupsanddowns if you would like it re-opened.

Steff

Little Miss Chatterbox
Relationship to Diabetes
Type 2
and the letter today is E and the nunber is 95.

While talking with my DSN the subject of food labelling arose and we spoke about food labelling the traffic light systen green amber and red but other then that i brtought up the subject of e numbers and how i find iot very complicated trying to figure out what e numbers are where and what they all mean so while i had a little tim on my hand i thought i would find some things out and i reckoned some people newbies or even others might find it handy to know which e numbers to avoid ........so this is what i found out


Where are Sweeteners Found
?
Sweeteners are used in a wide variety of food products, such as biscuits, cakes, low-calorie drinks, sweets and sauces, and some are also sold as a product in their own right, for use with cooking or as an alternative to sugar in drinks. In order for food manufacturers to be able to use sweeteners in products, research is carried out and monitored by the Food Standards Agency to ensure that the sweetening products used are safe and healthy for people to consume.

In fact, the use of sweeteners in food is officially controlled in Britain by the Sweeteners in Foods Regulations 1995 (SI 1995 No 3123) and similar regulations are used in Northern Ireland too.

The alternative sweeteners have been developed so they are a lot sweeter than normal sugar. Due to this, they are commonly known as intense sweeteners and, theoretically, you need to less of them to produce the same effect as sugar. However, compared to sugar, they have no energy content. The intense sweeteners and their E numbers are as follows:

* E950 ? acesulfame K (this is 150 ? 200 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E951 ? aspartame (200 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E954 ? saccharin (up to 300 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E955 ? sucralose (about 600 times sweeter than sugar/sucrose)
* E952 ? cyclamates (about 30 times sweeter than sugar/sucrose).
* E957 ? thaumatin (not so widely used, as it?s not as sweet as some of the other products. It?s derived from the bacterium Thaumatococcus danielli).
* E959 ? neohesperidine dihydrochalcone.

Many of these sweeteners are better known by their brand names. E955, sucralose, for example, was originally sold under the brand name Splenda, whereas E951, aspartame, has been marketed under a variety of names, including NutraSweet and Canderel.

There role of sweeteners in foods and drinks is pretty self-explanatory ? they?re there to make products taste sweet and palatable, yet without the fattening and calorific effects of sugar. Many of them, such as aspartame, are commonly used in diabetic products as a sugar substitute and help adapt foods so they can be suitable for consumption by people suffering from diabetes.

Despite this seemingly positive role that sweeteners play, there are some concerns about them too. Take aspartame, for example. This humble E number (E951) is widely used in a range of products, but it has been associated with side-effects in some people, especially those who have the condition phenylketonuria. Due to this, you?ll often notice that packaging contains the message, ?Contains a source of pneylalanine,? which acts as a warning to people susceptible to the ingredient to avoid it.


so what i can gather out of that us anything with 95 is to be avoided..

anyways i hope somebody finds it useful and i aint just wasted a thread LOL x
 
and the letter today is E and the nunber is 95.

While talking with my DSN the subject of food labelling arose and we spoke about food labelling the traffic light systen green amber and red but other then that i brtought up the subject of e numbers and how i find iot very complicated trying to figure out what e numbers are where and what they all mean so while i had a little tim on my hand i thought i would find some things out and i reckoned some people newbies or even others might find it handy to know which e numbers to avoid ........so this is what i found out


Where are Sweeteners Found
?
Sweeteners are used in a wide variety of food products, such as biscuits, cakes, low-calorie drinks, sweets and sauces, and some are also sold as a product in their own right, for use with cooking or as an alternative to sugar in drinks. In order for food manufacturers to be able to use sweeteners in products, research is carried out and monitored by the Food Standards Agency to ensure that the sweetening products used are safe and healthy for people to consume.

In fact, the use of sweeteners in food is officially controlled in Britain by the Sweeteners in Foods Regulations 1995 (SI 1995 No 3123) and similar regulations are used in Northern Ireland too.

The alternative sweeteners have been developed so they are a lot sweeter than normal sugar. Due to this, they are commonly known as intense sweeteners and, theoretically, you need to less of them to produce the same effect as sugar. However, compared to sugar, they have no energy content. The intense sweeteners and their E numbers are as follows:

* E950 ? acesulfame K (this is 150 ? 200 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E951 ? aspartame (200 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E954 ? saccharin (up to 300 times as sweet as sugar/sucrose).
* E955 ? sucralose (about 600 times sweeter than sugar/sucrose)
* E952 ? cyclamates (about 30 times sweeter than sugar/sucrose).
* E957 ? thaumatin (not so widely used, as it?s not as sweet as some of the other products. It?s derived from the bacterium Thaumatococcus danielli).
* E959 ? neohesperidine dihydrochalcone.

Many of these sweeteners are better known by their brand names. E955, sucralose, for example, was originally sold under the brand name Splenda, whereas E951, aspartame, has been marketed under a variety of names, including NutraSweet and Canderel.

There role of sweeteners in foods and drinks is pretty self-explanatory ? they?re there to make products taste sweet and palatable, yet without the fattening and calorific effects of sugar. Many of them, such as aspartame, are commonly used in diabetic products as a sugar substitute and help adapt foods so they can be suitable for consumption by people suffering from diabetes.

Despite this seemingly positive role that sweeteners play, there are some concerns about them too. Take aspartame, for example. This humble E number (E951) is widely used in a range of products, but it has been associated with side-effects in some people, especially those who have the condition phenylketonuria. Due to this, you?ll often notice that packaging contains the message, ?Contains a source of pneylalanine,? which acts as a warning to people susceptible to the ingredient to avoid it.


so what i can gather out of that us anything with 95 is to be avoided..

anyways i hope somebody finds it useful and i aint just wasted a thread LOL x

lol well i guess it us lot buggered again!!!!! hehehehe
 
Thanks Steff, this is realy helpful as my sister in law who is not diabetic, has problems with wrtificial sweetners.
 
Steff, thanks for all the information about the articifial sweetners. I have told my sister in law to come have a look and will be adding it to my information file for future reference.
 
no probs i just thought it is something i have great trouble understanding myself so others may as well
 
Thanks Steph its good reading and a good idea to share info on subjects which arnt general knowlege and good to know.

Thanks 🙂
 
Status
This thread is now closed. Please contact Anna DUK, Ieva DUK or everydayupsanddowns if you would like it re-opened.
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