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Is coconut sugar the perfect alternative sweetener?

It tastes great, but coconut sugar may not live up to all of the health claim hype.

A worker grinds coconut palm sugar

A worker grinds coconut palm sugar. Source: Bloomberg, Getty Images

There is sugar, and then there is sugar. That found in fruits and vegetables, for instance, is part and parcel of a nutritious, whole food. But as we all know by now, it’s the  in processed foods, prepared foods, and beverages, such as soft drinks and sports or energy drinks, that can wreak havoc on our health.

About one in 10 people gets 25 per cent or more of his or her calories from added sugars, and an important 15-year study published in  found that “participants who took in 25 per cent or more of their daily calories as sugar were more than twice as likely to die from heart disease as those whose diets included less than 10 per cent added sugar. Overall, the odds of dying from heart disease rose in tandem with the percentage of sugar in the diet — and that was true regardless of a person’s age, sex, physical activity level, and body-mass index (a measure of weight).”

Lots of folks turn to  such as stevia or agave nectar, which are viewed as less processed than table sugar.
One of the latest in this ever-expanding category is coconut sugar, which is derived not from coconuts but from the flower-bud sap — nectar — of the coconut palm (Cocos nucifera). Although the terms coconut sugar, palm sugar and coconut palm sugar are often used interchangeably (and confusingly), palm sugar comes from the sap collected from different palm species.

Coconut palm sap, which is about 80 per cent water, is boiled to evaporate the liquid content, and the solids that remain are granulated to form coconut sugar. It looks and tastes much like brown sugar.
gluten-free coconut and chocolate brownies
These wickedly good are sweetened with coconut sugar. 

As far as coconut sugar’s chemical structure goes, it is around 70 percent  — as is regular sugar. The remainder consists of individual molecules of glucose and fructose (the two sugars that make up sucrose). According to the , in the Philippines, coconut sugar also contains minerals such as iron, zinc, calcium, and potassium. But even though the mineral content of coconut sugar is marketed to the max, you’d have to consume far more than a teaspoon or two in your coffee or breakfast bowl to reap the same nutritional benefits you would get from a banana, say, or a serving of dark greens.

Another health claim made by manufacturers is about coconut sugar’s  — that is, the measure of how rapidly a carbohydrate-containing food raises blood sugar levels. Foods are ranked in comparison to a  (either glucose or white bread) and given a numerical value. A low GI comes in under 55; a moderate GI ranges from 56 to 69; and a high GI is any number over 70. (Aren’t you glad I look this stuff up so you don’t have to?)
Much has been made of coconut sugar’s low GI of 35, but as far as I can tell, that number is based primarily on a study of “10 Apparently Healthy Adults” in the Philippines, a country with a . According to the University of Sydney, which publishes a very large, if not exhaustive, online database of the glycemic index and glycemic load values of various foods, , which is at the top end of the low category. (White and brown sugars have a GI of around 64, putting them into the moderate category.)

Keep in mind that judging foods strictly by the glycemic index is not as straightforward as you may think.

“GI can also vary from person to person,” the American Diabetes Association explains. “It will change depending on how a food is cooked, and what the food is eaten with. In the case of coconut palm sugar, it is likely to be mixed or prepared with other ingredients that contain carbohydrates.”

The association goes on to say that it’s fine for people with diabetes to use coconut sugar as a sweetener, but they shouldn’t treat it any differently from regular sugar, as it provides the same amount of calories (15) and carbohydrates (4 grams) per teaspoon.

says in relation to the glycemic index that "it is recommended that people with diabetes have moderate amounts of carbohydrate and include high fibre foods that also have a low GI (not all high fibre foods have a low GI)... GI numbers are to be used as a guide only as individual foods do not have the same response in all people with diabetes."

So caveat emptor. Coconut sugar isn’t a magic bullet. It’s not a mineral supplement. It’s not a superfood. It’s not even a whole food. But it is a perfectly delicious sweetener with a deeper flavor than plain old table sugar, so enjoy it in small amounts. Or not.

This article was originally published on . Read the .

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5 min read
Published 15 July 2016 1:23pm
Updated 15 July 2016 1:55pm
By Jane Lear


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