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Agave Nectar is
Toxic!
For years I've warned of the dangers of fructose, and more recently
the fraud of Agave 'Nectar' (what a clever, deceptive word!) after
buying a bottle in Australia, which informed me that agave is
actually 98% pure, refined fructose! I came across this excellent
article and I have obtained full, unconditional permission from this
author to reproduce his article, one I think you will find
eye-opening and extremely educational. Read this with an open mind,
and think about your own HEALTH and that of others - NOT about your
pocket or your business - but about what this stuff may do to your
and others' health. It's really important, as YOUR health may depend
on it.
Agave Nectar, the High Fructose Health Food
Fraud by Rami Nagel
Agave nectar is advertised as a "diabetic friendly," raw, and a
"100% natural sweetener." Yet it is none of these. The purpose of
this article is to show you that agave nectar is in reality not a
natural sweetener but a highly refined form of fructose, more
concentrated than the high fructose corn syrup used in sodas.
Refined fructose is not a 'natural' sugar, and countless studies
implicate it as a sweetener that will contribute to disease.
Therefore, agave nectar is not a health building product, but rather
a deceptively marketed form of a highly processed and refined
sweetener.
Agave nectar is found on the shelves of health food stores primarily
under the labels, "Agave Nectar 100% Natural Sweetener," (1) and
"Organic Raw Blue Agave Nectar." (2) In addition, it can be found in
foods labeled as organic or raw, including: ketchup, ice-cream,
chocolate, and health food bars.
The implication of its name, the pictures and descriptions on the
product labels, is that agave is an unrefined sweetener that has
been used for thousands of years by native people in central Mexico.
Botanically, agave plants are in the lily order Liliales and the
order Asparagales (depending on which botanical taxonomic system you
use) both of which define agave as a flowering plant. For "thousands
of years natives to central Mexico used
different species of agave plants for medicine, as well as for
building shelter," so claims the fanciful pedigree of this plant.
Natives would also allow the sweet sap/liquid of the agave to
ferment naturally, which created a mildly alcoholic beverage with a
very pungent flavor known as 'pulque'. They also made a traditional
sweetener from the agave sap/juice (miel de agave) by simply boiling
it for several hours. But, as one agave seller explains, the agave
nectar purchased in stores is neither of these traditional foods: "Agave
nectar is a newly created sweetener, having been developed during
the 1990's." (3)
What is Agave Nectar?
The principal constituent of the agave is starch, such as what is
found in corn or rice. The process in which the agave starch is
converted into refined fructose and then sold as the sweetener agave
nectar is through an enzymatic and chemical conversion that refines,
clarifies, heats, chemically alters, centrifuges, and filters the
non-sweet starch into a highly refined sweetener, fructose. Here, a
distinction must be made. Fructose is not what is found in fruit.
Commonly, fructose is compared with its opposite and truly naturally
occurring sweetener, known as 'levulose'. There are some chemical
similarities between fructose (man made) and levulose (made by
nature), and so the synthetically refined sugar fructose was labeled
in a way to make one believe it comes from fruit. Levulose is not
fructose even though people will claim it is. Russ Bianchi is
Managing Director and CEO of Adept Solutions, Inc., a globally
recognized food and beverage development company. Russ explains:
"If fructose were natural, I would be able to go out to corn field
and get a bucket of sweetener. I can go to a beehive and get honey
that I can eat without processing it. I can go to an apple tree and
pick an apple and eat it. I cannot go out into a cornfield, squeeze
corn, and get fructose syrup, and I cannot go into an agave field,
and get the product sold on retail shelves, as agave nectar. Falsely
labeled agave fructose and high fructose corn syrup are both
products of advanced chemistry and extensive food processing
technology." (4) Mr. Bianchi has an insider's view of the health
food industry and the food creation industry, having worked in the
industry for decades.
Take water for example. We all know that the chemical formula for
water is H2O: two hydrogens and one oxygen. The opposite would be
O2H, which is nothing close to water. Likewise, man-made
fructose would have to have the chemical formula changed for it to
be levulose, so it is not levulose. Saying fructose is
levulose is like saying that margarine is the same as butter.
Refined fructose lacks amino acids, vitamins, minerals, pectin, and
fiber. As a result, the body doesn't recognize refined fructose.
Levulose, on the other hand, is naturally occurring in fruits, and
is not isolated but bound to other naturally occurring sugars.
Unlike man-made fructose, levulose contains enzymes, vitamins,
minerals, fiber, and fruit pectin. Refined fructose is processed in
the body through the liver, rather than digested in the
intestine.(5) Levulose is digested in the intestine. Refined
fructose robs the body of many micronutrient treasures in order to
assimilate itself for physiological use. While naturally occurring
fruit sugars contain levulose bound to other sugars, high fructose
corn syrup contains "free" (unbound), chemically refined fructose.
Research indicates that free refined fructose interferes with the
heart's use of key minerals like magnesium, copper and chromium. (6)
The reason why refined fructose is used so commonly as a sweetener
is simple: it's extremely cheap in cost. Agave nectar, as a final
product, is mostly chemically refined fructose, anywhere from 70%
and higher according to the agave nectar chemical profiles posted on
agave nectar websites. The refined fructose in agave nectar is much
more concentrated than the fructose in high fructose corn syrup. For
comparison, the high fructose corn syrup used in sodas is 55%
refined fructose. High fructose corn syrup is made with genetically
modified enzymes. Is agave syrup (refined fructose) made the same
way?
"They are indeed made the same way, using a highly chemical process
with genetically modified enzymes. They are also using caustic
acids, clarifiers, filtration chemicals and so forth in the
conversion of agave starches into highly refined fructose inulin
that is even higher in fructose content than high fructose corn
syrup", says Mr. Bianchi. Inulin is a chain of chemically refined
fibers and sugars linked together, and, this bears repeating, high
fructose inulin has more concentrated sugar than high fructose corn
syrup!
In a confidential FDA letter, Dr. Martin Stutsman (from the Food and
Drug Administration's Office of Labeling Enforcement) explains the
FDA's food labeling laws related to Agave Nectar: "Corn syrup
treated with enzymes to enhance the fructose levels is to be labeled
'High Fructose Corn Syrup.'" According to Mr. Stutsman, agave, whose
main carbohydrate is starch, requires the label "hydrolyzed inulin
syrup." Even though, like corn, agave is a starch processed with
enzymes, it does not require the label high fructose agave syrup
because the resulting refined fructose sweetener is so sweet that it
is chemically closer to inulin.
From this point forward, agave nectar will be referred to by a more
accurate name: agave syrup. This name is also legally uncomplicated
and non-deceptive, per US Federal labeling laws, even though the
true name would be hydrolyzed high fructose inulin syrup. "The
product called 'agave nectar' is really chemically refined
hydrolyzed high fructose, which is intentionally mislabeled to
deceive consumers," states Mr. Bianchi.
In a stunning report released in October 2008, the U.S. government's
own accountability office reported that of the thousands of food
products imported into the US each year from 150 countries, just 96
total food items were inspected by the FDA to insure label accuracy
and food safety. (7) The FDA doesn't usually protect consumers
regarding food safety or food labeling, nor does it usually take
action against many misleading labels. This was seen with the
processed infant formula scandal from China, where infant milk
powder was tainted with toxic melamine.
High Fructose Agave's Dubious History
In the year 2000, with warrants in hand, federal agents from the
Office of Criminal Investigations of the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) came banging on the door of North America's
largest agave nectar distributor, Western Commerce Corporation in
California. In an extremely rare case of the FDA protecting consumer
interests (rather than supporting big business, while shutting down
legitimate and health consciousness competition), they discovered
that Western Commerce Corporation was adulterating their agave syrup
with high fructose corn syrup (to lower the cost even more and
increase profit margins). While the federal agents confiscated the
material in the warehouse, the owners of Western Commerce
Corporation were nowhere to be found. Those who ran the company fled
the country with millions of dollars in assets to avoid criminal
prosecution.
This adulterated agave syrup (refined fructose) was also labeled as
certified organic (8) to fool consumers into thinking they were
getting a pure product. This shows you how unverified organic labels
were used in the USA, and continue being used even now.
Today, high fructose agave syrup is made primarily by two companies,
Nekulti, and IIDEA. Yet a third agave marketer, by the name of
'Volcanic,' has a suspicious claim on their website. "If your agave
comes from one of the other two companies in Mexico, something has
been added." (9) They are referring to Nekulti and IIDEA. Their
claim is based upon an analysis, which claims that their agave
nectar has a lower refined fructose level.
Blue Agave Nectar is Not a Safe Sweetener
When the Spaniards came to the New World, around 1535, they brought
with them a desire for brandy. When their supplies ran out they had
to find a new alcoholic beverage to replace their lost brandy. The
Spaniards found that by distilling the juice of the plant now known
as the blue agave plant they could produce a potent alcoholic
beverage, which over time has evolved into what we now call tequila.
In order to produce a sweetener from the blue agave plant, the
entire pineapple -like, giant root bulb of the plant is removed from
the earth. It is then dried and juiced, making an agave starch
juice. This in no way resembles any form of traditional use of the
blue agave plant. While great for distilling tequila, the blue agave
plant, when transformed through a chemical process into refined
fructose, may contain many properties that make them dangerous and
toxic for regular human consumption.
"Yucca species, together with other agaves, are known to contain
large quantities of saponins," according to Tyler's Honest Herbal.
Saponins in many varieties of agave plants are toxic steroid
derivatives, as well as purgatives, and are to be avoided during
pregnancy or breastfeeding because they might cause or
contribute to miscarriage. These toxins have adverse effects on
non-pregnant people and many health compromised consumer
categories as well. They are known to contribute to internal
hemorrhaging by destroying red blood cells, and they may gravely
negatively harm people taking statin and high blood pressure
drugs. Agave may also stimulate blood flow in the uterus.(10) Other
first hand reports indicate agave may promote sterility in women.
Since the agaves used for agave syrup are not being used in their
traditional way, there should be a warning label on the sweetener
packages that it may promote miscarriage during pregnancy, through
weakening the uterine lining.
What's Wrong With Fructose?
Once eaten, refined fructose appears as triglycerides in the blood
stream,or as stored body fat. Elevated triglyceride levels, caused
by consumption of refined fructose, are building blocks for
hardening human arteries. Metabolic studies have proven the
relationship between refined fructose and obesity.(11) Because
fructose is not converted to blood glucose, refined fructose doesn't
raise nor crash human blood glucose levels - hence the claim that it
is safe for diabetics. Supposedly, refined fructose has a low
glycemic index, and won't affect your blood sugar negatively. But
the food labels are deceptive. Refined fructose is not really safe
for diabetics. "High fructose from agave or corn will kill a
diabetic or hypoglycemic much faster than refined white sugar," says
Mr. Bianchi. "By eating high fructose syrups, you are clogging the
veins, creating inflammation, and increasing body fat, while
stressing your heart. This is in part because refined fructose is
foreign to the body, and is not recognized by it."
The average person consumes about 98 pounds of highly refined corn
fructose per year in the USA, that roughly translates into half a
cup of refined fructose per day. In an average supermarket, at least
2/3 of all items contain some form of highly refined fructose,
because it is one of the cheapest ingredients and fillers for foods,
next to water, air, and salt. In health food stores, some foods
contain a sweetener called crystalline fructose or other sweeteners
labeled as fructose. Essentially, these are all refined corn
fructose, labeled in a way to trick people that it is something more
natural. Mr. Bianchi concludes:
"The simple answer tends to be the correct one. There is no land of
milk and agave. Milk comes from goats, cows, humans, etc., and honey
comes from bees. What I want people to understand is that
mislabeling a sweetener like agave syrup is about money and profit,
to the real determent of your health. The unethical factor is that
the natural health food business has gone to great lengths in the
case of agave to defraud consumers, by deceiving and lying to those
who are trying to seek better health. There is something ethically
worse about a company pretending to sell something all natural to
people seeking health, than a mainstream company not pretending that
their food is healthier. For example, nobody selling fast and junk
foods is advocating it is health food. When you are in a natural
health food store, you expect to pay extra money for something that
is good for you. We have con artists here, pretending to deliver
better health at a higher cost, when in reality it is equal to, or
much worse than the many other sweeteners or harmful junk food.
People are expecting to receive health, and are intentionally being
defrauded for profit."
Amber Agave Syrup (refined fructose)
Agave syrup (refined fructose) comes in two colors: clear or light,
and amber. What is this difference? Mr. Bianchi explains, "Due to
poor quality control in the agave processing plants in Mexico,
sometimes the fructose gets burned after being heated above 140
degrees Fahrenheit, it creates a darker, or amber color."
Chain Food Stores and Health Food Stores
When Western Commerce Corporation was shut down, due to their agave
syrup alteration scheme in 2000, the big guys in the food industry
stayed away from any agave syrups. They knew better than to risk
lawsuits, and health consumer fraud. "They were clear that agave was
criminally mislabeled per US Code Of Federal Regulation labeling
laws, with an untried sweetener, new to he market, that contained
saponins, and was not clearly approved as safe for use." explains
Mr. Bianchi. For many years following this bust agave syrup was not
used.
But recently, some sellers in the agave syrup field, once quiet,
have begun sneaking back into the food and beverage chain. And
retail food giants like Whole Foods, Wegman's, Trader Joes and
Kroger, (12) who should know better, and who should know the food
labeling laws and requirements, still have no hesitation in selling
the toxic, unapproved, and mislabeled refined fructose agave syrup,
as well as products containing it. Mr. Bianchi explains the legality
of this practice. "The simple answer here, again, tends to be the
correct one. The stores carry agave products knowing that if they
are caught, the legal responsibility will be on the agave sellers
and producers, and not the stores. They will just pull it off the
shelves. They may also be victims themselves and lied to by the
purveyors and sellers of agave products. So long as agave products
are profitable, the stores will carry them, regardless of fraudulent
labeling or health concerns. Stores will continue to carry agave
until consumer fraud complaints to local district attorneys,
consumer unions, class action litigation or severe reactions like
death ensue."
Conclusions on Agave Syrup
Without the FDA making efforts to enforce food-labeling laws,
consumers cannot be certain that what they are eating is even what
the label says it is. New sweeteners like agave syrup (refined
fructose) were made to coin a profit, and not to help or assist
vital health. Due to the lies from many companies who sell agave
syrup (refined fructose), you have been led to believe that it is a
safe and a natural sweetener. The retail refined agave syrup label
does not explain that it goes through a complicated chemical
refining process of enzymatic digestion, which converts the starch
into the free, man-made chemical fructose that has a direct link to
serious the degenerative disease conditions so prevalent in our
culture. While high fructose agave syrup won't spike your blood
sugar levels, the fructose in it will cause: mineral depletion,
liver inflammation, hardening of the arteries, insulin resistance
leading to diabetes, cardio-vascular disease, obesity, and may be
toxic for use during pregnancy.
If you want to buy something sweet, get a piece of fruit, not a
candy bar labeled as a "health food." If you want to create
something sweet, use sweeteners that are known to be safer. For
uncooked dishes, unheated raw honey or dates work well. For cooked
dishes or sweet drinks, a good organic maple syrup, or even freshly
juiced apple juice or orange juice can provide delicious and
relatively safe sweetness. In general, to be healthy, we cannot eat
sugar all day, no matter how natural the form of sugar is, or is
claimed to be. One should limit total sweetener consumption to
approximately 10% of daily calories. Or one sweet side dish per day,
(like a bowl of fruit with yogurt.)
While it may be depressing news to hear about the lack of standards
in the health food world, let this news help encourage you to seek
access to more pure and unrefined foods and sweetener sources, so
that you can be healthier.
Additional Reading - Published Books that Talk about the
Dangers of Refined Fructose and problems with food labeling and
deceptive health practices.
Sweet Deception by Dr. Joseph Mercola
The Truth About the Drug Companies by Marcia Angell
In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan -
The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan
Sugar Shock! by Connie Bennett
Super Size Me by Morgan Spurlock
Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlosser
Welcome to Food Politics by Marion Nestle
Generation Rx, Greg Crister
Bad Foods, Michael Oakes
Food Fight by Dan Imhof
The Sugar Fix, Timothy Gower, Richard Johnson
Please Don't Eat the Wallpaper, Dr. Nancy Irven
Understanding R Epidemic, Sylivia Ledoux 2008
Fat Politics by J. Eric Oliver
Obesity Epidemiology, Frank Hu
Let Food Be Your Medicine, Sally-Ann Creed
Women's Health Journal, Sally-Ann Creed & Aldyth Thomson
Nutritious, Sally-Ann Creed & Jill Fraser Halkett
Sally-Ann's Comments:
Please understand it is my express wish to educate on health and
wholeness, not to pull down anyone's thriving business. However,
where there is a product (like flaxseed oil, soya products, fructose
and agave), I feel a moral responsibility to speak out about it. You
are not forced to read this, but if you do, it may well save your
health, and that of those you love. I have no financial stake, no
agenda - just a passion to see people get well! I spent more than
half my life sick (read My Story
http://www.sallyanncreed.co.za/about.htm
) and almost died - so I am very very passionate about truth in the
world of health and truth in general. Often sadly, there are
money-making schemes selling products people perceive to be healthy
but are in fact poisonous or dangerous to one's health. It is my
belief from scientific literature and extensive personal research
that the following products which are perceived to be "health"
products, are cases in point:
* Fructose
* Agave in any form
* Soya in any form
* Flaxseed oil in any disguise (flaxseeds in their natural state are
fine)
* Cottonseed oil
* Grapeseed oil
* Sunflower and safflower oil
* Malted products
* Artificial sweeteners other than stevia
The list is longer, but I'll stop here for now. Many years of
research and
personal experience has convinced me that these are not healthy, but
that in
fact they break down your health and promote inflammation and
illness.
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