What is the healthier option?
What is the healthier option?
Last week we were going to buy popcorn. OK, I admit, we do not only eat potato chips. We ended up trying to make a choice between the two healthier options shown in the picture to the right. Since we could not figure out which one to choose, we bought them both and took a closer look at the nutritional information at home. Which one do you think is the version lowest in fat?
The top version boasts: "Light - 50% less fat than our buttery flavour popping corn" and "whole grain goodness".
The option below: "Smartpop!" with claims of "0% trans fat" and a "health check" logo.
Indeed, there are multiple versions of this product and though the top one (5g fat per portion) is 50% lower in fat than the "standard version" with 13g hydrogenated soybean oil, the "Smartpop" version cuts out more than another 50% of the fat: 2g fat/portion. Instead of hydrogenated soybean oil both "light" and "smart" version contain fractionated palm oil.
Today I bought two more of the top "Light" version. A compromise between taste and nutritional composition.
This real life example illustrates a few things:
Snack Manufacturers (in this case Orville Redenbacher's, Conagra) have been successfully developing healthier versions of snacks.
For consumers, it can be hard to figure out which are the healthier, respectively the healthiest versions.
Snacking is also about taste, so you may decide to indulge - or to compromise.