FDA: High-fructose corn syrup will not be called ‘corn sugar’
There has been a lot of back and forth about real and perceived
differences between sugar and high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) over the
years — including here at Grist, where Tom Laskawy has explored the contentious topic at length. And while the science is definitely still unfolding, the fact that the Corn Refiners Association has shown a strong interest in blurring the line between the two is certainly compelling reason to suspect there are, in fact, some noteworthy differences.
As of Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) agrees. The agency released an official response
to the Corn Refiners Association’s 2010 request to refer to the
substance as “corn sugar” with a resounding no. The reasons they gave
read as benignly technical, but also hint at the differences in the
kinds of processes needed to make sugar and HFCS (one being a highly
industrial, synthetic process resulting in a food that could not exist
in nature if we wanted it to). The statement reads:
… the use of the term “corn sugar” for HFCS would suggest that HFCS is a solid, dried, and crystallized sweetener obtained from corn. Instead, HFCS is an aqueous solution sweetener derived from corn after enzymatic hydrolysis of cornstarch, followed by enzymatic conversion of glucose (dextrose) to fructose.
The report also points out that the name “corn sugar” is already spoken for, and is used on food labels to describe dextrose.
But it’s not just concerned parents who want to see a clear
distinction maintained between the two additives. The Sugar Association
also appears to be holding a hard-line. The industry group even went so
far as to issue a press release recently when a medical study
out of UCLA resulted in the headline “Sugar can make you dumb.” The
group blamed the Corn Refiners Association’s “multimillion-dollar
advertising campaign” (which no doubt includes the often-parodied moms-at-a-birthday-party television commercials) for generating the confusion.
Indeed, the UCLA study would also give me pause if I were in the
sugar business. (Okay, I admit it gives me pause anyway.) When the team
of scientists “zeroed in on high-fructose corn syrup, an inexpensive liquid six times sweeter than cane sugar,” a press release from the school
reads, they found that “eating too much fructose could block insulin’s
ability to regulate how cells use and store sugar for the energy
required for processing thoughts and emotions.”
Now if that study had focused on a substance recently rebranded “corn
sugar” would its implications be nearly as meaningful? Maybe not.
Thanks to this move by the FDA, we don’t have to wonder about that — for
the time being.
Source: http://grist.org/corn/fda-high-fructose-corn-syrup-is-definitely-not-corn-sugar/
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