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How Healthy Are These "Health Foods?" We Asked Top Nutritionists to Find Out

Which ones are actually healthy and which ones are just "healthy?"
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Ark Foods

Claim: Ark Foods markets itself as a modern-day farming company that creates simple and fresh food options.

What the experts say: "These vegan dishes are made with healthy vegetables, spices, extra virgin olive oil and, depending on the product, even use cashews to make cheese-flavored ingredients," say the Nutrition Twins. "They make a healthy, low-calorie pasta replacement or a healthy cauliflower mac and cheese."

Verdict: Healthy!



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Bubba's Fine Foods Ungranola

Claim: Bubba's Fine Foods Ungranola markets itself as a gluten, grain, dairy, soy and refined sugar-free alternative to traditional granola.

What the experts say: "This grain-free, no-refined sugar granola has only three grams of added sugar, which is far less than many granolas which contain upwards of 16 grams, and definitely fits in recommendations to stay below eight grams of sugar per serving of cereal," say The Nutrition Twins. "Green saba bananas provide a boost of prebiotic fiber." That said, they warn that like most granolas, the granolas here are still fairly high in calories and that these in particular are also high in saturated fat because of the coconut oil.

Verdict: Healthy! (Albeit somewhat caloric.)



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Pirro's Sauce

Claim: Pirro's Sauce is a line of sauces made using simple ingredients, bright flavors with no additives for lighter cooking.

What the experts say: First off it's worth pointing out that this line of sauces can rival most made-from scratch options as far as taste. That said, the Nutrition Twins point out that although it's great that the sauces source fresh produce for all their ingredients, including their basil, carrots, garlic, fennel, etc., and don't use additives, they still include added sweetener (honey) and a source of saturated fat (butter), in a marinara sauce. "Their Bolognese sauce is nitrate and nitrite-free, but still contains saturated fat from the uncured bacon and the veal. Each one-half cup serving of the Bolognese sauce has more calories than the same one-half cup serving of pasta and also has 3.5 grams of saturated fat per serving."

Verdict: Fresh and tasty, but rather high-cal!

Image via @pirrossauce



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Snow Monkey

Claim: Snow Monkey markets itself as a vegan "anytime" dessert.

What the experts say: "Made with only fruits and seeds and what Snow Monkey calls 'superfoods,' this dessert actually can help to keep your blood sugar stable thanks to its' six satisfying grams of protein and three grams of fiber, which slow digestion and don't allow for a sugar high followed by a crash," say The Nutrition Twins. "Snow Monkey also contains anti-inflammatory packed ingredients that are extremely rare to find in a dessert including Ceylon cinnamon, hemp seeds, cacao and matcha green tea."

Verdict: Healthy!



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Treeline Cheese

Claim: Treeline Cheese is a vegan, kosher, dairy-free, probiotic rich cheese that is also Paleo friendly.

What the experts say: "These vegan cheeses contain all real, healthy ingredients like cashews, spices and probiotics," say The Nutrition Twins. "Each serving is 90-100 calories, which is less than the 115 calories in an ounce of most cheese, and it's much lower in saturated fat than traditional cheese. As a bonus, it actually contains a little fiber unlike conventional cheese."

They do note that there is a small downside — and that's that each serving contains only 3-4 grams of protein per serving, which is less than the seven grams of protein in each ounce of milk-based cheese.

Verdict! Healthy! (Though not as protein-rich as regular cheese.)



BY SHARON FEIEREISEN | FEB 6, 2020 | SHARES
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