Not exact matches
Besides the
fat content, premium brands pack more ice cream into each
serving because they contain less air — they are denser and harder to scoop than regular brands — meaning more calories,
fat and sugar
per serving.
French dressing smashes things up with 88 calories in each tablespoon, and Ranch crashes the party with 140, and if you go with the Blue Cheese dressing from Carl's Jr. you should just stay home
because it's 320 calories
per serving with almost all of them coming from
fat.
I hate doing this
because who really wants to know, but that recipe (using real ice cream) has 388 calories, 15 grams of
fat, and 47 grams of sugar
per serving.
Check the
fat and kilojoule levels on the side of the packet before purchasing
because you could be looking at a difference of up to 500kj
per serving in just the low -
fat varieties!
It may look sinful, but
because it's baked (rather than fried), it comes in under 300 calories and 2 grams of saturated
fat per serving.
Initially, the company was told they could not use the word «healthy» on packages of its nut bars,
because the
fat content of the nuts exceeded the FDA's recommendations for a «healthy» product: three grams of total
fat and the one gram of saturated
fat per serving.
For example,
per serving (usually 14 g) it may say 0 trans
fat, but
per 100 g the trans
fat can become 0.2 g. That's
because when you convert to 14 g the trans
fat is actually 0.028 g, which will be rounded down to 0 g (it looks safer to consumers this way).
This is
because food manufacturers are permitted to put ZERO next to the trans
fat line item on the label as long as the food contains.5 grams or less of trans
fat per serving.
If this is true, they are able to market their product to us as being trans
fat free
because there is less trans
fat per serving than our labelling laws recognize.
They get away with this
because, under FDA regulation, if there is less than 0.5 grams of trans
fats per serving than it can be deemed trans
fat free.
Besides the
fat content, premium brands pack more ice cream into each
serving because they contain less air — they are denser and harder to scoop than regular brands — meaning more calories,
fat and sugar
per serving.
1
serving per day is enough to help you lose
fat faster but personally I do 1.5 to 2
servings per day
because my body does fine with it.
But
because of FDA rounding rules, trans
fat content below one half gram per serving is rounded down to zero grams in the Nutrition Facts — so a product can contain trans fats while showing a Trans Fat value of
fat content below one half gram
per serving is rounded down to zero grams in the Nutrition Facts — so a product can contain trans
fats while showing a Trans
Fat value of
Fat value of 0g.