The Claim:
It is often said that brown sugar is a healthier option than white
sugar. But you can chalk that up to clever marketing or plain and simple
illusion. In reality, brown
sugar is most often ordinary table sugar that is turned brown by the
reintroduction of molasses. Normally, molasses is separated and removed
when sugar is created from sugarcane plants.
Brown Sugar Is
Healthier Than White Sugar
THE FACTS:
We all know that brown rice is
better for you than white rice, and whole wheat bread comes out on top over
white bread, but does this pattern extend to sugar as well?
In some cases, brown sugar – particularly when it is referred to as “raw
sugar” – is merely sugar that has not been fully refined. But more
often than not, manufacturers prefer to reintroduce molasses to fine
white sugar – creating a mixture with about 5 percent to 10 percent
molasses – because it allows them to better control the color and size
of the crystals in the final product.
So the two varieties of sugar are similar nutritionally. According to
the United States Department of Agriculture, brown sugar contains about
17 kilocalories per teaspoon, compared with 16 kilocalories per teaspoon
for white sugar.
Because of its molasses content, brown sugar does contain certain minerals, most notably calcium, potassium, iron
and magnesium (white sugar contains none of these).
But since these
minerals are present in only minuscule amounts, there is no real health benefit to using brown sugar. The real differences between the two are taste and the effects on baked goods.
Health Beckon
Hmmm...am corn-fused there...
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