The average American consumes three times the WHO’s recommended daily sugar limit (25g), largely from seemingly “healthy” foods like yogurt, granola bars and salad dressings.
Sugar hides under innocuous names (e.g., “evaporated cane juice,” “brown rice syrup”) in processed foods – added for flavor, shelf life or masking low-fat ingredients.
Top hidden sugar offenders: yogurt (flavored/low-fat versions can contain 23g per serving – nearly a full day’s limit), salad dressings (creamy varieties e.g., honey mustard often have 13g per serving), condiments (ketchup 4g/tbsp, BBQ sauce 16g/serving and teriyaki glaze 24g/serving are sugar bombs) and granola bars and “health” snacks (some pack 6–16g of sugar, while veggie sticks/canned fruit in syrup add unnecessary sweetness).
The 1970s–80s “low-fat” trend led manufacturers to replace fat with sugar – a practice still fueled by industry lobbying and weak labeling laws.
How to fight back with smart swaps: Choose plain yogurt + fresh fruit, oil/vinegar dressings, mustard/mayo over sweet sauces and homemade snacks (e.g., kale chips, nuts) and read labels vigilantly – sugar lurks where least expected, even in “healthy” processed foods.
Sugar lurks where many least expect it in foods often marketed as nutritious choices. While the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends limiting sugar intake to 25 grams or less per day, the average American consumes more than triple that amount. Much of this excess comes not from desserts or sodas but from seemingly “healthy” staples like yogurt, granola bars and salad dressings.
Read Full Article: https://www.naturalnews.com/2026-03-06-hidden-sugars-in-healthy-foods-sabotage-diet.html