Health

15 Delicious, Sugar-Free Breakfast Recipes

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Sugar may be sweet, but the effects it can have on your health are decidedly not.

While some foods naturally contain sugar — fruit and milk, for example — many foods have sugar added to enhance their flavor, including some you might not suspect because they don’t taste overly sweet. Processed foods, baked goods, and even condiments like ketchup and salad dressing often contain added sugars.

“Added sugars contribute sweetness and palatability to foods, but don’t add any beneficial nutrients. This is why they’re called ‘empty calories,’” says Brittany Poulson, RDN, CDCES, a certified diabetes care and education specialist in Grantsville, Utah.

The current Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend limiting added sugars to no more than 10 percent of your total daily calorie intake, which is approximately 12 teaspoons of sugar for a standard 2,000 calorie a day diet. You can reach — or even exceed — those limits pretty quickly if you’re not careful. In fact, according to data published in Frontiers in Nutrition in June 2021, Americans consume an average of nearly 17 teaspoons of added sugars per day.

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