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Reply to "Michelle Obama selling her new juice drink at Costco "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Looks like it's healthier than most of the crap drinks being sold to kids.[/quote] I’ve had so many requests to comment on Michelle Obama’s new PLEZi food business—reduced sugar but ultraprocessed artificially sweetened drinks for kids—that I feel obliged to write about them, unhappy as I am as having to consider this enterprise so ill advised. Why my dismay? Take a look at the PLEZi Blueberry Blast drink’s nutrition information and ingredient list. This product has a lot less sugar than Coke or Pepsi and contains zero added sugars, but it has five sweeteners: Apple juice concentrate (Translation: sugar derived from apples) Watermelon juice concentrate (ditto from watermelons) Blueberry juice concentrate (ditto from blueberries) Stevia leaf extract Monk fruit extract These, plus “natural flavors” (don’t get me started) and some of the other ingredients put this squarely in the category of ultraprocessed products, now strongly associated with poor health and promotion of excessive calorie intake. These drinks do not meet my idea of a “higher standard,” alas. Instead, I see PLEZi as a direct competitor of existing drinks—Kraft’s Capri Sun and Kool-Aid Jammers among them—both with less sugar than Coke or Pepsi, and neither what I would consider a health food. I found PLEZi shelved right with other sweetened drinks aimed at kids at the Target in Ithaca, New York. The competition PLEZi’s nutritional profile isn’t all that different from that of “half the sugar” Capri Sun. Here’s Capri Sun Strawberry Kiwi: Capri Sun has the same kinds of ingredients as PLEZi, but less fruit juice, and a little more overall sugar. To me, they don’t look all that different. What about taste? I bought packages of PLEZi Blueberry Blast, Orange Smash, and Capri Sun ‘s “half the sugar” Strawberry Kiwi. OK, I am not these products’ core customer. They are not aimed at me. I thought the PLEZi drinks were oddly colored and watery, and had undistinguishable flavors and the slight off-taste of monk fruit sweetener. Capri Sun is noticably sweeter, which is not surprising: it has 7 grams of sugar in 6 ounces, whereas PLEZi has 6 grams of sugar in 8 ounces. But all of these drinks raise the same question: Is a somewhat less sugary, sweetened, “better-for-you” drink necessarily a good choice? Many healthier drinks are available for kids. I would like to know: Why anyone would think kids need another drink like this. Why someone didn’t identify PLEZi drinks as ultraprocessed. Why someone didn’t intervene to protect Mrs. Obama from getting involved in this dubious enterprise. https://www.foodpolitics.com/2023/05/plezi-healthier-for-kids-maybe-but-healthy/ Dubious indeed. [/quote] For those of us with IBS, this is a no go. The stevia and monk fruit would have me running to the bathroom every 5 minutes. ( not that I would buy it anyway, TBH) [/quote]
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