A Better Sweetening Alternative Extract of Stevia Rebaudiana Bertoni Code 575 -- Price: $19.95 Net Wt.: 4.4 Oz. (125 g.) Availability Serv. Size: 0.2 g.Serv. / Container: 625
Glucose (sweetness) Equivalency
To Sugar by Weight: 82.5 lbs. (37,450 g.)
Each bottle comes
with a small spoon that holds up to 0.5 grams (a serving is
a "spoon tip" or 0.2 grams).
Truth is, a small amount of product
at the tip of the spoon (about 0.2 grams) is more than enough
to adequately sweeten an 8 oz. (240 ml.) glass
of water. When we say concentrated -- we mean it!
uch of this site is devoted to the politics of health ---
the unleashing of forces that inhibit natural, inexpensive, non-proprietary
products from reaching mass markets in favor of more expensive,
proprietary (i.e. patentable), less healthful alternatives.
(Early on, we detailed this phenomenon as it relates to
cancer therapies -- also see our
instructive Mother Goose parody on Kah-Kah
Cola.) Stevia is another example of this corrupt, political dynamic. Stevia is a small green plant (Stevia Rebaudiana Bertoni, of the Asteracaea family), which bears leaves that have a very sweet taste (unprocessed, about 30 times sweeter than sugar by weight; in extract form, roughly 300 times sweeter). Because Stevia leaves are so concentrated and so little is needed to replace sugar -- without all the calories, one would think that this was an ideal substitute. If people knew about Stevia -- based only on its merits as a sweetener, who would ever bother to use sugar --- let alone Aspartame® (Equal®), cyclamates or saccharin? (Read Dr. Samuel Epstein on the carcinogenicity of all three of these latter compounds in his book The Politics of Cancer - Revisited. (p. 640)) That's the problem for these larger industrial concerns. People wouldn't. In Japan, where the attempt to suppress stevia never caught hold (since their chemical companies are not major players in the sugar substitute business) stevia is the sugar replacement of choice. In fact, as of the year 2000, Japan consumed 90% of the world's supply of stevia leaves. Enter the Chemical Industrial Mafia. As the esteemed American herbalist Rob McCaleb (founder of Herb Research Foundation) has noted in his essay, "Stevia Leaf: Too Good To Be Legal?," Stevia has been under almost constant regulatory assault by industry sycophants in the U.S. since 1987. Although the passage of the Dietary Supplement Health & Education Act of 1994 has provided some relief, continued harassment of Stevia marketers prevails, which would explain why so few people know about and use stevia.
Other Established Nutritional Benefits
Stevia gets its intense
sweetness from a small group of naturally-occurring
glycosides (Steviosides, Rebaudiosides and a Dulcoside).
The ingestion of this small mass of glycosides amounts
to virtually no calorie addition to foods --- the basis
for its use as a sugar substitute. But that is not the
only nutritional benefit of stevia. In its native Paraguay and Brazil, stevia is sold as an aid to those with diabetes and hypoglycemia -- since researchers have amply demonstrated that stevia helps regulate blood sugar. Though only anecdotal, users in the U.S. have reported that a small amount taken with each meal brings blood glucose levels down to normal within a short period. (Note: each person responds differently, so no patient should ever experiment on his or her own and make adjustments to their drug regimen without the oversight of a competent practitioner). Other observed benefits of Stevia include:
Stevia.net -- "All About the Herb That Is Sweeter Than Sugar!"
Final Comment: The Role of Simple Sugars
As in all things, Stevia should be
used in moderation. The Atkin's and Zone Diet programs (more so with the
former) have some people convinced that all simple sugars (the monosaccharides
fitting the H6-O12-C6 configuration) are bad. Truth is, simple sugars
found in natural foods -- fruits, vegetables, and grains, are an important
part of a healthy diet. To use Stevia to the exclusion of sugars from
those natural food sources would not be adviseable. Our society's
excessive use of table sugar (sucrose), corn fructose, and other
"high DE" (dextrose equivalent) additives has created the current
imbalance to which Stevia can be a valuable corrective tool. To make
proper use of sugars metabolically (and keep blood triglycerides
in check), you should maintain a regular exercise regimen -- something
quite important that no dietary additive can replace.
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Danger: Stevia
Is Non-Toxic
What may be more frustrating
to its competitors than anything else is that stevia, when taken
in moderate levels of use, is completely
non-toxic.
It truly is the most healthful sweetener you can find anywhere.
Dr. Daniel Mowrey reported, "More elaborate safety tests were performed by the Japanese during their evaluation of Stevia as a possible sweetening agent. Few substances have ever yielded such consistently negative results in toxicity trials as have Stevia. Almost every toxicity test imaginable has been performed on Stevia extract (concentrate) or stevioside at one time or another. The results are always negative. No abnormalities in weight change, food intake, cell or membrane characteristics, enzyme and substrate utilization, or chromosome characteristics. No cancer, birth defects, no acute and no chronic untoward effects. Nothing." This is not to say that Stevia does not have detractors. CSPI (Center for Science in the Public Interest) has raised concerns about the prospect of approval in the U.S. saying that Americans go to extremes and inclusion in products like soft drinks could bring about carcinogenic responses of their own. Based on our own review of all available literature, we feel that moderate use of stevia is safe --- certainly as safe or safer than the artificial cousins with which stevia is currently compared. (See last stevia internet link in column at left.) It's a Concentrate: Be CAREFUL! Use the spoon that comes with your order, and always start with a tiny amount. (We recommend a "spoon tip" -- roughly 0.2 g.). Remember ... you can always add more -- but you can't ' "take it away." |