How to choose healthier Halloween candies
Dietitian weighs in on how to trick or treat without cheating your nutrition plan
Dietitian weighs in on how to trick or treat without cheating your nutrition plan
Dietitian weighs in on how to trick or treat without cheating your nutrition plan
Letâs face it: October is a tough month to stick to a healthy eating plan. Long before Halloween arrives on Oct. 31, buckets brimming with chocolate and candy are literally everywhere â in the grocery store aisles, on your kitchen counter, at the office â and the temptation is hard to pass up.
The trouble is, Halloween treats donât treat you very well. Even if you're maintaining your workout plan, consuming too much of the sweet and fatty stuff can still raise your blood sugar and triglycerides (blood fat levels) and damage your dental health. high in refined sugar also increases your risk of obesity, diabetes, disease, depression and disorders.
That said, no one wants to hand out kale chips for Halloween. Registered dietitian Dr. gave advice on how to make healthier choices when indulging in store-bought candy this season.
Donât just count calories
When selecting Halloween candy, itâs easy to fall into the mindset that treats with less calories are always the healthier option. But thatâs the wrong way to think about it, Kadey explained, because some candies are lower in calories simply because theyâre made of pure sugar and lack fat.
âBy eating them, youâre just setting yourself up for a bad sugar crash,â he said. Without enough fat and protein to help stabilize your blood sugar, pure sugar candies (such as Skittles and candy corn) spike your blood sugar levels rapidly before causing an inevitable crash.
âInstead of just looking at the calorie count, you should be looking at where those calories are coming from,â Kadey said. If there arenât many real whole foods in the ingredients â such as peanuts or cocoa â thatâs a good sign it wonât be very nutritionally beneficial.
For example, Skittles, which have 60 calories and 14 grams of sugar in a fun size pouch, are comprised of sugar, corn syrup, hydrogenated palm kernel oil, various artificial flavors, dyes and â believe it or not â wax. Mini , which also clock in at 60 calories but with 9 grams of sugar, share similar key ingredients, including sugar, corn syrup, artificial flavors and dyes, and also contain partially hydrogenated soybean oil â a source of bad-for-you trans fats (even though the candy wrapper reads âtrans-fat free,â that technically means it contains less than 0.5 grams of trans fats per serving).
And bad news for candy corn fans: The waxy, tri-colored kernels contain more than 12 ingredients, including sugar, corn syrup, confectionerâs glaze (a food grade shellac that comes from the secretion of an insect called a lac bug) and food dyes. In short, nothing you really want to be putting in your body.
Instead of noshing on these highly processed treats, if youâre going to eat candy, Kadey suggests opting for chocolate candies or chocolate candy bars.
Choose the right chocolate
While theyâre higher in calories than the pure-sugar alternatives, chocolate candy bars tend to be more nutritionally balanced with fat, protein and some antioxidants. Even better, studies have linked the high cacao (or cocoa) levels in dark chocolate to health benefits such as and a . But beware: Kadey warns that sometimes chocolate is sneakily labeled as dark chocolate, even when it isnât.
âIf the first ingredient listed on a chocolate bar is sugar, itâs not dark chocolate,â he said. For example, contains 45 percent cacao and its first (primary) ingredient is sugar, while chocolate comes in second.
A good rule of thumb is to seek out dark chocolate thatâs at least 70 percent cacao, with sugar making up the remaining 30 percent of the bar. The higher the percentage of cacao in a bar, the less sugar it has, thus the better it is for you.
Kadey recommended a bar like , which is 85 percent cacao and contains cocoa beans, cocoa butter, raw cane sugar and vanilla beans. One serving size (40 grams or half the ) has 230 calories, most of which come from fat: 22 grams, 13 of which are saturated fat. But before you freak out about those numbers, remember that the fats in dark chocolate come from cocoa butter and are mostly healthy, made up of oleic acid (a monounsaturated fat also found in olive oil), stearic acid (a saturated fat that has a neutral effect on cholesterol) and palmitic acid (a saturated fat that can affect cholesterol; however, it only accounts for a third of the fats).
On the bright side, the bar has 3 grams of protein, 5 grams of fiber and only 6 grams of sugar â less than half the amount that a fun size Skittles contains. It also contains 40 percent of your daily value of iron.
In most bags of Halloween chocolate, however, you wonât find Alter Eco products. So how do classic milk chocolate candy bars like Reeseâs, Snickers, 3 Musketeers and Almond Joy stack up?
A five-piece serving of is slightly lower in calories and fat than Alter Eco â 210 calories, 12 grams of fat, 4 grams of protein, but is loaded with 19 grams of sugar. Similarly, one serving of mini Snickers (four pieces) totals 190 calories, with 19 grams of sugar, 8 grams of fat and 3 grams of protein. Miniature candy bars are one of the healthier picks of the bunch, as a serving size (two bars) contains 160 calories, 9 grams of fat, 16 grams of sugar and 1 gram of protein.
âChocolate candy bars containing ingredients like nuts are going to be better options, because the protein and fats will help keep you from crashing later,â Kadey said. âAlso, theyâll fill you up faster, so youâre less likely to overindulge.â
Milk chocolate candy that doesnât contain nuts tends to rank higher in sugar levels. Filled with a fluffy nougat, mini bars have less calories than those listed above â just 170 calories for a seven-piece serving â and only have 5 grams of fat, but pack in 27 grams of sugar and just 1 gram of protein. For a similar calorie count, you would be better off eating a serving size (seven pieces) of , which have 9 grams of fat but only 18 grams of sugar.
âYou should aim for about 120 calories and less than 10 grams of sugar,â Kadey said, when asked what basic guidelines to follow when choosing candy. For example, you could eat three , which total 120 calories and roughly 11 grams of sugar.
Indulge your sweet tooth after your workout
If you're thinking, "If work out, canât I afford to eat some candy?" Kadey said that while exercise doesnât make you immune to the bad effects of candy, if youâre craving the sweet stuff, itâs alright to reward yourself with a few pieces right after you run.
âWhen you finish running, your body needs to replenish its fuel stores anyway, so the sugar and fat wonât be as detrimental,â he said. Of course, candy shouldnât be all youâre refueling with â make sure to eat a balanced meal.
Still, itâs best to limit the amount of candy you eat. The easiest way to avoid temptation? Keep it out of sight.
âDonât leave candy buckets out in the open,â Kadey said. Instead, he recommends storing it in the cupboard or freezer, then taking out just a few pieces before returning the bag to its hiding place.
âThink of Halloween treats like a reward, not a routine,â Kadey said.
The bottom line: Itâs OK to treat yourself to some candy at Halloween or any other occasion. Just be smart about what you choose, when you indulge and enjoy it in moderation.
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