Yesterday I posted information on ingredients to look out for when purchasing your food. Today is information on the nutrients and how to calculate and see what the % of the food that provides that nutrient.
Five easy steps to help you read a label.
Step 1: Look at the serving size
Compare the serving size on the package to the amount that you eat. If you eat the serving size shown on the Nutrition Facts Table you will get the amount of calories and nutrients that are listed.
Step 2: Look at the calories
Calories tell you how much energy you get from one serving of a packaged food.
Step 3: Look at the per cent Daily Value (% Daily Value)
% Daily Value puts nutrients on a scale from 0% to 100%. This scale tells you if there is a little or a lot of a nutrient in one serving of a packaged food. Use this percentage to compare the nutrient content of different foods.
• If a food has between 5% and 14% of a nutrient, it means that the food is a source of that nutrient.
• Between 15 and 24%, means the food is a good source of a nutrient (over 30% for vitamin C)
• And over 25% is an excellent source of a nutrient (over 50% for vitamin C)
Step 4: Try to get more of these nutrients
• Fibre, vitamin A, vitamin C, iron, calcium
Step 5 : Try to get less of these nutrients
• Fat, saturated fat, trans fat, sodium, cholesterol
Below is more detailed information (label broken down)
You'll find the serving information listed right at the top of the Nutrition Facts label. This is important because everything you read on the rest of the label is based on one serving. There are two parts to the serving information on the Nutrition Facts label, the serving size and the number of servings.
The serving size tells you the size of each serving. It could be an number or a common measurement. For example, one serving of chicken noodle soup is 1/2 cup. Sometimes this information can be very misleading. If a package contains six cookies, but the serving size is two cookies, then the package contains three servings, not just one. So if you eat all six cookies, you are eating three servings.
On the chicken noodle soup example above, it is important to note that a serving is one-half cup of the condensed soup as it comes in the can and not one-half cup of the soup after it has been mixed with water. Always look to see if the serving size should be measured or counted before the product is prepared or after.
Sometimes the number of servings may be easier to understand than serving size. On the chicken noodle soup Nutrition Facts label, the number of servings is given as about 2.5. That means if you prepare the can of soup with any amount of water and eat the whole thing yourself, you have eaten two and one-half servings (and that doesn't include any crackers).
This section of the Nutrition Facts food label contains information about calories, fat content, amount and types of carbohydrates, and amount of protein in the product. The label shows the amounts in grams (g) or milligrams (mg) and the percentage of the daily value (the amount needed every day) for each of these nutrients. This information is based on a 2,000 calorie per day diet. So it won't be exactly right for everybody. But it will give you an idea of how the food item will fit into your energy nutrient needs.
Notice that sodium information is located here rather than with the other minerals down lower on label. In the chicken noodle soup Nutrition Facts food label above, you can see that one serving of condensed chicken noodle soup has 37% of your daily value for sodium. If you eat the whole can of soup, you would get 92% of the recommended amount of sodium you should consume for the entire day.
This part of the label also contains information on fiber. You can see from our example, chicken noodle soup from a can doesn't contain much fiber .
This part of the Nutrition Facts label shows the vitamin and mineral content of the product. The FDA requires information on calcium, iron, vitamin A, and vitamin C all be included on the Nutrition Facts label. Sometimes the food manufacturers will add information about other vitamins like niacin or folic acid if the product contains any significant amounts of those nutrients.
On the chicken soup Nutrition Facts label, you can see there is some vitamin A and some iron, but no vitamin C or calcium. That means you'll have to get those nutrients from the rest of your diet. Remember if you eat the whole can, you'll have to multiply those percentages by the number of servings you just ate to get the correct total amounts.
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