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If you've ever said, "I was born with a sweet tooth," you weren't kidding. According to taste researchers, sweetness is one of our first flavour experiences newborns clearly sense and enjoy sweet tastes.
That sweet taste usually comes from one of two types of sweeteners: sugars, which provide calories, and low-calorie sweeteners, which provide few or no calories.
The sweet side of beverages
Except for water and non-sweetened teas and coffees, most popular beverages like sparkling beverages, juices and juice drinks, coffee drinks, sweet teas and sports drinks contain some type of nutritive sweetener, non-nutritive sweetener or a combination of both.
Learning about the sweeteners used in beverages can help you make informed decisions and better understand the role beverages play in a healthy diet.
Nutritive sweeteners
Sweeteners like table sugar (sucrose) and high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) are considered nutritive sweeteners because they are energy-containing carbohydrates that can be used to fuel the body. Both sucrose and HFCS contain about 4 calories per gram, or 16 calories per teaspoon (5-ml). Learn more about carbohydrates.
Non-nutritive sweeteners
Non-nutritive sweeteners are also sometimes called low-calorie or intense sweeteners because their sweetness is so potent ranging from 200 to 600 times the sweetness of sucrose. That means a little goes a long way. And this is why sweeteners such as aspartame, sucralose and saccharin can taste sweet but contain virtually no calories.
Learn more about common sweeteners used in beverages...
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