Your sweet tooth may be killing you
JAN 20, 2024
“Sugar, without question, is the number one murderer in the history of humanity—much more lethal than opium or radioactive fallout.” ~~Dr. Nyoiti Sakurazawa
An acquired taste for sweets has evolved over centuries. In ancient times, people would satisfy the desire for sweets with raw honey. However, today we generally seek out something made with refined sugar, called sucrose, to satisfy a “sweet tooth.” And sweeten things we do. In fact, the typical American diet is so laden with sucrose that it should be declared a national disaster.
At the turn of the century, 66% of carbohydrates consumed by Americans came from complex sources. Today, nearly 50% of the carbohydrates that are consumed are made with refined, simple sugars. The average American consumes 17 teaspoons (71.14 grams) every day. That translates into about 57 pounds (about 27 kg) of sugar per person each year! That’s 129 cups per year or 1/3 cup of sugar per day consumed in candy, cookies, breakfast cereals, and Starbucks’ frappuccinos, to name but a very short list of sweet foods. Soft drinks are the primary source of sucrose in the diet. Some sodas contain as much as 12 teaspoons per can.
It has been said that if you were to drink just one 12-ounce can of a sugar-sweetened soft drink every day and not cut back on calories elsewhere, you would gain at least 5 pounds per year!
If you don’t think that you eat that much sugar, think again. As much as 76% of the refined sugar in foods is “hidden.” Sugar is the #1 food additive and can show up unaware in salad dressings, soups, peanut butter, canned goods, and catsup. Refined sugar not only adds pounds to the waistline, it has been implicated in diseases ranging from hyperactivity and hypertension to cancer.
Partial list of hidden names for sugar:
Barley Malt Diastase Maltodextrin Sucrose
Caramel Galactose Maltose Syrup (any)
Carob Syrup Glucose Molasses Treacle
Corn Syrup High-Fructose Corn Syrup Raw Sugar Turbinado Sugar
Dextrane Honey Sorbitol Yellow Sugar
What is that makes sugar so bad for you?
History
Cultivating sugarcane as a crop dates back to antiquity. Its origin is thought to be in what is now Papua New Guinea. The plant spread along human migration routes to southeast Asia and India. Around 500 B.C., India developed the technology for removing sucrose from cane juice and then turning it into crystallized sugar granules.
The plant arrived in Southern Europe during the Middle Ages. Men were taken from Lagos, Africa, in the 1640s and sold into slavery to work the sugar cane fields in Seville, Spain. Soon after that, Portugal and the Netherlands also began using slavery to work in their sugarcane fields in Brazil.
By 1660, the British sugar trade had become so profitable that it was considered a matter of national security. The Navigation Act of 1660 was passed, which prevented shipments of sugar, tobacco, or any other product produced in the American colonies from going to any location other than countries and islands that were part of the British Empire. Within two years of its passage, the British were importing 16 million pounds (7.2M kg) of sugar from cane per year. To expedite processing and decrease wastage through spoiling, the first American sugar refinery was built in New York City in 1689. Demand for sugar worldwide continues to grow each decade and continues to grow even today.
Sugar Cane Becomes Sugar
The main sugar found in the sap of all green plants is sucrose. Minor sources of sucrose include maple trees and date palms. Sucrose for the refining process primarily originates from two sources, sugarcane and sugar beets. Both of these are converted into common white table sugar.
Sugarcane is a large, thick stalk of grass that is grown in tropical and subtropical climates worldwide. It is a perennial, meaning it doesn’t have to be replanted every year. New shoots will sprout from cut stalks. Typically, farmers will harvest crops from one planting for about 3 to 5 years, depending on the environment in which it is grown. The stalk comes in various colors, including white, yellow, deep green, purple, red, and violet. Mature canes can grow to be 26 feet tall (8 meters) and more than 2 inches thick (5 cm). Prior to harvesting, farmers sometimes burn sugarcane to reduce the amount of leafy extraneous material remaining when the cane to the factories for processing.
Approximately 13% of the sugarcane sap is sucrose. It is removed from the fibrous cane by soaking it in hot water and squeezing the pulpy mash through three sets of heavy rollers. The extracted liquid is dark grayish-green in color and very acidic. Lime, sulfur dioxide, and/or phosphoric acid are added to the raw juice, which is then boiled several times to remove impurities. The crystallized sucrose is removed via centrifugation, packaged, and sent to refineries. There, the process starts all over again. The crystals are washed, dissolved in hot water, and then centrifuged several times to remove the residual pulp and other impurities.
One of the final steps involves passing the slurry through bone char to remove impurities to whiten the appearance. The filtered product is crystallized, spun, dried, and packaged — ready for supermarket shelves as the white sugar we are familiar with.
Bone char is made from grinding bones from dead cattle and pigs and then roasting them in a kiln. The bones, procured from Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, and Argentina, are sold to traders in Scotland, Egypt, and Brazil, who turn them into char and sell it back to the sugar industry.
The fibrous cane left behind is known as bagasse. It has a range of uses, including turning into fuel to generate energy for the sugar manufacturing process. It is also used as fiber for paper production and can be used for animal feed.
Sugar is Not Food
The refining process makes sucrose into only empty calories, completely removing any residual vitamins, minerals, and fiber present in the original sugarcane. Without them, refined sugar is not only a non-nutritional substance, it is actually an “anti-nutrient.”
In this stripped-down state, the body cannot process this refined substance. Sucrose leaches vitamins and minerals from the body, placing a demand on digestion, detoxification, and elimination. Is it any wonder that Dr. Aseem Malhotra, a UK cardiologist and science director of Action on Sugar, said: “Added sugar has no nutritional value whatsoever and causes no feeling of satiety.”
Major by-products of sucrose production are molasses, soft brown sugar, English coffee sugar, and candy sugar. Molasses is the thick syrup that remains after the sucrose crystals are removed after the precipitation process. Sold as syrup, the molasses is often used to make alcoholic beverages, particularly rum. Soft brown sugar is white granular sugar that retains some molasses. Large, brown sugar crystals with a caramel flavor are packaged and referred to as English coffee sugar.This sugar is a mixture of partially purified sucrose and a residual of molasses. Sucrose granules that remain very large in size are packaged as candy sugar.
Organic sugar is made from evaporated cane juice. It retains some molasses, which gives it a darker color, and a few antioxidants, minerals, and vitamins B6 and C. Organic sugar is grown without the use of synthetic pesticides or herbicides. However, if packaged food is simply labeled “organic,” it can contain up to 30% genetically engineered food or other contaminants.
Turbinado sugar is a less processed option than white sugar and retains a small amount of molasses. Sugar In The Raw is a brand name for turbinado sugar. It is made by spinning sugarcane through special turbines, creating crystals that are larger than traditional table sugar. Any type of sugar created by sucrose processing has no nutritional value.
Sugar Beets
In the late 1700s, sugar beets began to be cultivated for sugar. However, it wasn’t until 1802 that the first beet sugar factory was built in Silesia, a region now located mainly in Poland with small strips in the Czech Republic and Germany. Over the next 50 years, more than 40 beet processing factories were established throughout France, replacing European dependence on sugarcane. Sugar beet refining began in the U.S. in Alvarado, California in 1872. By the end of the century, there were 30 factories in operation throughout the US.
Sugar beets are primarily used to produce sugar. They aren’t found in the grocery store. The purple, round vegetables we eat known as beets in North America are a different varietal. The British refer to it as the table beet, garden beet, red beet, dinner beet, or golden beet.
Each sugar beet contains approximately 14 teaspoons of sugar. The sugar beets are grown in temperate climates, where sugarcane will not grow. Each harvested acre of sugar beets is the source of nearly 4 tons of refined sugar. After harvesting the beets, they are shipped to factories where the tops are removed and used as cattle feed. They are washed, sliced, and boiled. The pulp is centrifuged to remove the beet juice. Lime is added to the slurry, which is then boiled and placed into settling tanks to crystallize. The refined sugar is packaged and classified for sale according to grain size as extra-coarse, coarse, standard, fine, or extra-fine. The final product cannot be distinguished from sugar processed from sugarcane.
Sugar-Related Illnesses
Carbohydrates are composed of three types of simple sugars: glucose, fructose and galactose. Fructose, found in fruit, is chemically the same as galactose, created by the body. These individual sugars are called monosaccharides. When they are combined together in groups of two, they are referred to as disaccharides or double sugar.
Important and readily recognized disaccharides are:
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sucrose: (glucose + fructose)…….refined table sugar
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lactose: (glucose + galactose)……milk sugar
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maltose: (glucose + glucose)……..grain, sugar
Consuming so much refined sugar has been shown convincingly to be associated with many health problems including:
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Hyperactivity
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Obesity
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Hypertension
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Elevated cholesterol -Yes, elevated cholesterol. Cholesterol is a fat. However, it is manufactured in the body from carbohydrates, NOT fat! ‘
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Indigestion/reflux
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Suppressed immune system
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Type 2 diabetes
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Osteoporosis
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Cancer
Your sweet tooth may be killing you.
A summation of the article written by Dr. Sherri Tenpenny 01/20/2024
DrtTnpenny.substack.com
Sugar, especially refined white sugar, is often called “the sweetest poison on the shelf.” Over centuries, humanity’s craving for sweets evolved from raw honey to the prevalent use of refined sugars, particularly sucrose. Today, the typical American diet is saturated with sugar: nearly half of carbohydrates consumed are now simple sugars, with the average person ingesting about 17 teaspoons (71 grams) daily, totaling approximately 57 pounds per year. Much of this sugar is hidden—about 76% is found in products you might not expect, from salad dressings to canned goods.
A Historical Lens
Sugarcane has ancient roots in Papua New Guinea and spread throughout Asia and beyond. India was a pioneer in crystallizing sugar around 500 B.C. By the 17th century, sugar became central to global trade, fueling economies and, regrettably, the slave trade. The British Empire’s Navigation Act of 1660 protected its lucrative sugar industry, and by 1689, New York City hosted America’s first sugar refinery.
How Sugar Is Made
Refined sugar primarily comes from sugarcane and sugar beets. Sugarcane is cultivated in tropical regions and harvested annually for several years. Extracting sucrose involves soaking and crushing the cane, treating the juice with chemicals, and boiling to separate and crystallize the sugar. A key part of whitening sugar involves filtering through bone char, made by burning animal bones. The residue, bagasse, is recycled for energy and industry.
Sugar beets, developed as a sugar source in late 18th-century Europe, are still used today—especially in climates unsuited to sugarcane. Though not sold as table beets, they are processed into indistinguishable refined sugar. Whichever source, the final white sugar is void of minerals, vitamins, and fiber.
The Impact of Refining
Refining strips sucrose down to empty calories, making it an “anti-nutrient.” The human body struggles to process this refined substance, which can leach essential nutrients and tax digestive and detoxification systems. Experts like Dr. Aseem Malhotra point out that added sugar brings zero nutritional value and no satiety.
Other Sugars and By-products
Molasses is the thick syrup left after refining and used in food and alcohol. Brown, coffee, and candy sugars are other by-products, differing mainly in molasses content and crystal size. Organic sugar, despite retaining minor nutrients and antioxidants, can contain contaminants unless strictly regulated.
Sugar’s Many Faces
Refined sugars show up under various names—26 at last count—including dextrose, glucose, and maltose. They are not just in obvious sweets but everywhere, often masked by creative labeling.
Health Consequences
Carbohydrates split into three sugars: glucose, fructose, and galactose. Refined sugar (sucrose) links glucose and fructose. Heavy consumption is strongly associated with a range of health problems:
Hyperactivity, Obesity, Hypertension
Elevated cholesterol (manufactured from carbohydrates, not fat), Reflux and indigestion, Suppressed immunity, Type 2 diabetes, Osteoporosis and
Cancer
Sugar and Cholesterol
Interestingly, cholesterol—a fat—is manufactured in the body from carbohydrates, not dietary fat. This links sugar intake directly to many cardiovascular issues.
Hidden Dangers
Most sugar is “hidden” in processed foods, making it harder to track consumption. Even if you think your diet is sugar-light, odds are good you’re eating more than you realize.
A Practical Tip
Remember: 4 grams of sugar equals 1 teaspoon. Nutrition labels can help you visualize, for example, that a can of cola contains about 12 teaspoons of sugar.
What You Can Do
Eliminate all refined carbohydrates for one week. Expect withdrawal: mood swings, irritability, fatigue. Most symptoms subside after a week, cravings fade in two weeks, and after three months, the health benefits are profound.
Beware of “healthy” sugars. Honey has benefits but is not exempt from scrutiny—quality and sourcing matter. Explore resources on sugar’s health impact and how to spot adulterated products.
For further support, tools like supplements aimed at sugar regulation and guidance from informed professionals are recommended. Education and prevention are the best medicine; knowing what’s “hidden” in your food is critical to health.
Final Thoughts
When referencing sugar, always clarify that refined, white sugar is the main culprit—the “sweetest poison.” By being vigilant about reading labels, understanding the refining process, and cutting back on processed foods, you can transform your health and well-being.
All lives are sweeter with wise advice and healthier choices. Prevention is truly the best medicine.