Written By: Christina Newberry
Reviewed By: Gloria Tsang, RD
Title: Registered Dietitian
Last Updated on:
February is National Snack Foods Month, a time when snack food manufacturers go into high gear to up sales and get packaged snacks into shoppers’ grocery carts and homes. According to the Snack Food Association (SFA), “SFA and the National Potato Promotion Board (NPPB) initiated National Snack Food Month in February 1989 to increase consumption and build awareness of snacks during a month when snack food consumption was traditionally low.” But many of the items being marketed as snack foods are highly processed and loaded with sodium and fat, making them just plain bad choices for a healthy diet, especially for kids.
In fact, highly processed snack foods are a key cause of our growing obesity epidemic – even those that claim to be diet-friendly, low in sugar, or fat-free. Many of these products with “low-everything” claims have been engineered to the point that they no longer resemble real food. The packages are covered in claims to make them sound healthy and diet-friendly, but wolfing down a product full of artificial ingredients tends to leave you feeling unsatisfied, and leads you to actually consume much more than if you had snacked on more satisfying non-processed real food with all of its natural fat and calories.
In her book Go UnDiet: 50 Small Actions for Lasting Weight Loss, our editor-in-chief Gloria Tsang says highly processed foods are “the weakest link” in any eating plan, but argues that some processed foods are much worse than others. From Go UnDiet, here’s Gloria’s five-second scan for avoiding the worst offenders when you’re looking for quick snacking products.
Table of Contents
Just three quick checks of the product’s package can clue you in to whether it’s a highly processed food that you should put back on the shelf:
Of course, while this quick test will help you avoid the worst offenders in the snack food aisle, it might be best to skip that aisle altogether. The simplest way to ensure healthy snacking is to keep fresh or dried fruit, or nuts and seeds on hand; reaching for an apple or handful of raisins is a surefire way to avoid highly processed snacks.
Alumni: University of Victoria – Christina Newberry is a writer and editor whose work has appeared in national and local magazines and newspapers. With a Bachelor’s degree in English and Anthropology from the University of Victoria and a Journalism Certificate from Langara College, Christina brings keen curiosity and the love of a good story to her work with HealthCastle.com.
Christina is a passionate traveler and urban gardener with an interest in vegetarian eating and making good, tasty food from scratch. Sharing lessons learned from her own experiences, Christina writes about lifestyle topics for HealthCastle, with a focus on eating well at home and on the road.
goundiet, grocery aisle, healthy snacks