HERBS AND SPICES ARE HEALTHY ALTERNATIVES TO SALT AND SATURATED FATS

 

HERBS AND SPICES ARE HEALTHY ALTERNATIVES TO SALT AND SATURATED FATS

    





In response to the low-fat craze of the 1990s, many food companies removed saturated fats from their products, only to replace them with sugars to maintain their palatability. Unfortunately, the resulting products were no healthier than the originals, and the average person consumes too much-saturated fat today. Now, a team of Penn State researchers has figured out how to remove some saturated fat, sugar, and salt from popular American foods while maintaining their tastiness. The trick? Replacing these overconsumed nutrients with a dose of healthy herbs and spices.

"Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death globally, and limiting saturated fat and sodium intake are key recommendations for reducing the risk of developing this disease," said Kristina Petersen, associate professor of nutritional sciences at Penn State. "Yet, we know that one of the key barriers to reducing intake of these ingredients is the flavor of the food. It has to taste good if you want people to eat healthy food. That's why our finding that participants preferred some recipes in which much of the saturated fat and salt was replaced with herbs and spices is so important."

The team used a nationally representative database from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, to identify 10 of the most popular foods typically high in sodium, added sugars, and saturated fat. These included meatloaf, chicken pot pie, macaroni and cheese, and brownies.

Next, they worked with culinary experts to develop three versions of these recipes. These recipes contained typical saturated fat, sugar, and salt. The second version was nutritionally improved by removing the excess saturated fat, sugar, and salt. The third version had the same nutrient profile as the second. Still, it contained added herbs and spices, such as garlic powder, ground mustard seed, cayenne, cumin, rosemary, thyme, cinnamon, and vanilla extract.

For example, the typical macaroni and cheese recipe included salted butter, 2% milk, American cheese, and salt. For the nutritionally improved version, the researchers swapped the salted butter for unsalted butter and reduced the amount in the recipe by 75%. They changed the 2% milk for skim milk, replaced some American cheese with reduced-fat cheese, and eliminated the extra salt. The researchers added onion powder, garlic powder, ground mustard seed, paprika, and cayenne for the nutritionally improved herbs and spices.

"Our goal was to see how much we could lower these overconsumed ingredients without affecting the overall properties of the food in terms of mouthfeel and structure, and then add in herbs and spices to improve the flavor," said Petersen.

Next, the researchers conducted blind taste tests featuring each of the 10 recipes. In a single session, participants evaluated all three versions of a dish, one at a time. Between 85 and 107 consumers completed each test. Participants rated several aspects of acceptability for each recipe, including overall liking and attribute liking, such as the food's appearance, flavor, and texture. Participants then ranked the dishes in order of preference.


"We found that adding herbs and spices restored the overall liking to the level of the original food in seven of the ten recipes," said Petersen. "In fact, participants actually liked some of the recipes better than the originals."

Specifically, participants liked the healthier, flavor-enhanced versions of the brownies and chicken in cream sauce significantly more than the original recipes. For five dishes -meatloaf, chili, apple pie, pasta with meat sauce, and taco meat -- participants liked the healthier, flavor-enhanced versions about the same as the original ones. They liked the healthier, flavor-enhanced cheese pizza, mac and cheese, and chicken pot pie recipes less than the original.

Finally, the team modeled the potential impact of 25 to 100% of U.S. adult consumers eating these recipes instead of the original recipes. They found that the estimated daily reduction for saturated fat and salt would be about 3% if 25% of consumers adopted the healthier recipes versus approximately 11.5% if 100% of consumers adopted the more nutritious recipes. Smaller estimated reductions in added sugars were observed across the modeled range of consumer adoption.

The results appeared in a recent Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics issue.

"We demonstrated a meaningful reduction in overconsumed nutrients is possible with modification of these 10 recipes, and these changes are acceptable to consumers," said Petersen. "This suggests that more research should be done to look at how to implement this more broadly, how to educate people to make these kinds of changes. Importantly, these findings could be applied to the food supply because most foods that people consume are purchased in a prepared form. I think that would have a profound impact on people's health."

Other authors on the paper include Victor Fulgoni, senior vice president, Nutrition Impact LLC; Helene Hopfer, associate professor of food science, Penn State; John Hayes, professor of food science, Penn State; Rachel Gooding, senior research chef, McCormick & Co.; and Penny Kris-Etherton, Emeritus Evan Pugh University professor of nutritional sciences, Penn State.

The McCormick Science Institute supported this research.

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