We’ve all made countless day-to-day lifestyle changes in the wake of the pandemic. Going out to eat—even if restaurants are reopening for indoor dining in some parts of the country—still poses a risk, which makes doing your own food shopping at the grocery store and eating at home the safer bet. Nielsen research reports that 54{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} of Americans are cooking more now than before the pandemic, so that’s a great sign.
© Provided by Eat This, Not That!
Dr. Fauci is the pillar of proper COVID-19 protocols. As the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, he’s been the leading expert on the disease and has been constantly updating the public with new warnings and information about the virus.
The Washington Post interviewed Dr. Fauci along with five other health specialists to see how they deal with coronavirus risks in their everyday lives. With different guidance being thrown around seemingly every day, we were particularly interested to read how the pandemic pundit currently goes about grocery shopping safely. While he follows many of the precautions you should take before grocery shopping, apparently there are actually a few non-essential ones he skips over.
This is Dr. Fauci’s exact COVID-19 shopping protocol—directly from the man himself. Follow his advice and make sure your current routine doesn’t involve any of the 7 Ways You’re Grocery Shopping Wrong During COVID-19.
Plus, buying your own food at the grocery store can be a positive and healthy change that can vastly improve your diet—that is, if you’re reading nutrition labels and making informed buying decisions. However, new data shows that most shoppers are still turning a blind eye to what’s going in their carts… and bodies. (Related: 100 Unhealthiest Foods on the Planet.)
According to Shorr’s first Food Packaging&Consumer Behavior Report, only one in four people “always” read food labels when grocery shopping. That’s only 25{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} of the grocery store-visiting population. Others admit that they read labels “most of the time” (45{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}), “sometimes” (24.5{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}), “rarely” (5{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}), or “never” (0.5{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}).
Interestingly enough, the same report shows that food packaging and labels have hugely impacted how people food shop and what they choose to buy, especially within the past three months. The data shows:
– 47{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} of people purchased food brands that they were previously unfamiliar with because of the product’s packaging
– 64{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} have paid more for a food product with popular labeling (think: “organic” and “GMO-free”)
– 49.5{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} cite the ingredients list as the aspect of packaging that they trust the most
Gallery: 25 Grocery Shopping Mistakes Making You Gain Weight (Eat This, Not That!)
25 Grocery Shopping Mistakes Making You Gain Weight
The grocery store is the great equalizer: no matter your age, gender, race, or socioeconomic status, you’re bound to spend at least some of your time perusing its aisles on a regular basis. In fact, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average American spends upwards of five hours a week shopping.
And while you might assume that, after so many years of loading up your cart and heading to the checkout, you’ve more or less gotten the hold of things, there are likely dozens of critical errors you’re making every time you set foot in a supermarket. From picking up free goodies along the way to navigating the wrong aisles, these grocery shopping mistakes could be one of the sneaky reasons you’re gaining weight.
If you want to get healthier and slim down in a hurry, start by avoiding these 25 mistakes you’re making at the grocery store. Read on, and for more on how to eat healthy, make sure you avoid these 108 Most Popular Sodas Ranked By How Toxic They Are.
1. You shop at big box stores.
We may think that buying in bulk is a good way to save money, but in the long run, it can lead to overeating and waste. When we’re presented with larger serving sizes, like a family-size bag of chips, we’re more likely to overindulge than when we’re given a more petite portion. Even worse, research from the National Bureau of Economic Research found that the prevalence of restaurants and big-box grocers, such as Costco, contributes to weight gain. “Food’s gotten cheaper and more readily available, so we eat more of it. It’s really simple,” one of the study’s coauthors, Charles Courtemanche, a health economist at Georgia State University, told NPR. If you want to lose weight for good, count these larger serving boxes among the 21 Foods to Toss Out of Your Kitchen For Good.
STAY INFORMED: Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest food news delivered straight to your inbox.
2. You don’t read nutrition labels.
Just because something’s on your shopping list doesn’t mean you should put it into your cart without checking the label first. Many of the products you buy every day could be loaded with high levels of sugar, inflammatory fats, and harmful pesticides. Reading the label helps you become an informed consumer and keeps you from accidentally adding junk food posing as healthy stuff to your cart. In fact, an Agricultural Economics study analyzing a large-scale National Health Interview Survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that women who read nutrition labels are more likely to stay slim in the long run.
3. You grab free samples.
Those free samples at the grocery store aren’t really free—your body is paying for them, at least. Even if the snack sample you’re grabbing seems small, without nutrition information in front of you, you could be adding hundreds of calories to your daily calorie budget. To add insult to injury, you’re also more likely to overeat these delicious samples; research published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition suggests that distracted snacking (like when you’re idly munching at the grocery store) can lead to overeating.
4. You shop while hungry.
If you’re hungry before you hit the grocery store, you might want to wave goodbye to your willpower. Shopping while hungry is a recipe for grabbing convenience foods and snacks you’d otherwise avoid. In fact, you’re more likely to make non-food purchases when hungry, according to a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study. Make healthier choices while shopping by eating something small, like an apple or a handful of nuts, before you hit the shop—in fact, research published in Nutrition Journal suggests that choosing the former can actually reduce the total number of calories you consume in a day and help you shed some weight.
5. You shop without a grocery list.
According to Wharton researchers, 20 percent of purchases at the supermarket are unplanned. And while riffing is great for jazz solos or stand-up comedy, at the grocery store, it can get you into serious trouble. When you’re not using a list, the grocery store is your oyster, and giving into temptation is virtually inevitable. In a survey of 2,000 consumers, 70.5 percent of respondents said that their most impulsive purchases tend to be food, as reported by CNBC. Before you head to the store, make a list, and whenever possible, bring cash instead of cards so you won’t be tempted to buy extra items.
RELATED: Get lean for life with this 14-day flat belly plan.
6. You shop the center aisles.
While it may seem like it makes the most sense to travel up and down every aisle in the grocery store, doing so may be causing you to pack on pounds. The center aisles are generally where junk foods, like chips, candy, and soda, are shelved, making them a must-avoid for impulsive shoppers. Shopping around the perimeter of the store, where fruits, vegetables, and lean meats are more likely to be located, can help keep you from giving into the little voice telling you to buy that carton of ice cream. And while you’re in the produce section, be sure to pick up some of the 100 healthiest foods on the planet.
7. You choose foods based on packaging, branding, and labels.
Packaging designers should get some serious credit for their work, because they’re convincing us to buy a whole lot of junk. In fact, Cornell University researchers found that cereal mascots, like the Trix rabbit, who make eye contact with purchasers drove 16 percent more brand loyalty among cereal boxes. While it may be difficult to keep yourself from tossing something with exceptionally cute packaging in your cart when you see it, doing so will keep you healthier in the long run.
8. You buy food from the salad bar.
The salad bar may be convenient, but its healthiness is another story. Pre-dressed salads at your local salad bar are often loaded with fattening dressings, cheese, and other unhealthy toppings, and other salad bar choices, from cold sesame noodles to fried chicken, are no bargain for your health or waistline. Worse yet, it isn’t mandatory for fresh, prepared meals to have nutrition labels, so you may never get the full picture of what you’re putting in your body. And a Consumer Reports study found that nutritional information for some salad bar items was misleadingly incomplete and missing certain ingredients. Another potential downfall: Research shows that those big containers you pick up at a salad bar translate into bigger portions and higher calorie counts, David Just, PhD, a professor at Cornell University’s Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, told Consumer Reports.
9. You let your kids pick.
Kids can be wonderful, smart, precocious, creative, and a delight to be around. What they’re not, however, are nutritionists. When you let your kids choose foods at the store, you’re not doing what’s best for their health or your wallet. According to a report from the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), grocery stores intentionally put sugary cereals with cartoon characters at children’s eye level to provoke requests for those cereals. It gets worse: a 2014 Public Health Nutrition study noted that most of the candy, chips, and soda in checkout aisles are placed at children’s eye level and within reach.
Eat This! Tip: To avoid this happening to you, create a list together at home to make them feel like they’re part of the conversation without derailing your healthy eating plan.
10. You purchase food from bulk bins.
Buying from bulk bins can be an easy way to get great deals on healthy staples, like nuts, oats, and alternative flours. The downside? We often don’t pay attention to how much we’re eating when grabbing snacks from a large container. If you do buy in bulk, try portioning your food out in jars when you get home so you always know how much you’re eating.
11. You impulse shop at the checkout aisle.
Those snacks at the checkout counter are designed to seem particularly appealing, but they’re also a poor choice when it comes to your health. According to a report titled “Availability of Healthy Food Products at Check-out Nationwide, 2010–2012,” by University of Illinois researchers, 97 percent of supermarkets push candy and 93 percent sell sugar-sweetened beverages at checkout. If you’re battling a food craving or are feeling the need to treat yourself when you’re standing at the checkout, opt for a magazine instead—that craving will pass once the unhealthy food is out of sight. And certainly, don’t pick up any of these 105 most popular sodas—ranked by toxicity.
12. You shop when you’re too full.
While shopping when you’re famished can lead to poor food choices, shopping when you’re stuffed isn’t a much better choice. Shopping when you’re full can make all those healthy foods you’re usually eager to load your cart with seem less-than-palatable, making you more likely to buy less than you need or opt for less healthy choices.
13. You only buy for one meal.
Sometimes, you really just want chicken cordon bleu or a quiche, and you’re determined to get it, even if that means making an extra grocery trip. However, indulging those food whims can not only put a major dent in your budget, but it can also make it harder to reach your weight loss goals. (That’s not to mention all the extra time you’ll have to spend in the store if you have to shop every day.) Instead of buying ready-made food for one meal at a time, buy for the week and do meal prep; research published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine suggests that individuals who regularly prep their meals (instead of just buying solo servings of convenient stuff) eat a healthier diet.
14. You shop for items at eye-level.
There’s a reason why everything at the grocery store looks so tempting when you’re shopping: it’s supposed to. Grocery chains put items they want you to purchase in high volume at eye level so you’re more likely to buy them. It works regardless of the healthfulness of the item: when Frito-Lay experimented by placing its healthier products, like baked chips and peanuts, at eye level, they were popular with customers, according to the CSPI. The downside is that these eye level products tend to be convenience foods and sugary snacks that contribute to weight gain.
15. You choose items based on the ‘Organic’ label.
Eating organic produce can be a wonderful choice for the health of the planet. However, that doesn’t mean that every organic food item on your grocery store’s shelves is automatically a health food. Organic or not, a cheese puff is still a cheese puff. Besides, opting for food just because it’s organic also doesn’t mean you’re better off: an Annals of Internal Medicine review found little evidence of significant health benefits from organic foods.
16. You shop at the deli counter.
You may think you’re shopping healthier by getting your food at the deli case, but that’s not always true. Just like at the salad bar, when you buy food from a store’s deli, you’re not presented with the same nutrition info that you get on a regular package, meaning you’re more likely to be eating extra calories without even realizing it. That includes prepared salads (with extra mayo) and deli meats, which contain high sodium levels that can make you bloated.
17. You think ‘whole wheat’ is healthy enough.
If you’re wandering down the bakery, don’t stop at the first loaf you see with “whole wheat” on the label. Whole wheat is different from “100{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} whole grain,” and it can be the difference between picking up a loaf with 5 grams of sugar per slice (and made with refined white flour) and one that’s low in sugar and contains upwards of 5 grams of fiber per slice. The benefits of a high fiber diet include helping you lose weight, while a low-fiber, high-sugar diet will only help you gain weight.
18. You buy a large amount of food from the freezer aisle.
Yes, frozen foods are extremely convenient, but many of them are teeming with sodium because it acts like a preservative. Sodium will not only cause you to gain water weight by retaining water and bloating your stomach, but consuming high levels of sodium in your diet will also cause high blood pressure and heart problems. Keep freezer items to a minimum or read labels to make sure you’re keeping your sodium intake to lower than 30 percent of your daily value per meal, or 760 milligrams per serving.
19. You shop late at night or while stressed.
Though people can resist temptations, Dr. Deborah Cohen tells the CSPI that “factors such as stress, distraction, and fatigue can make people vulnerable to eating on impulse.” Paired with the widespread unhealthy foods you can find in the grocery store, and you have a recipe for lapses in temptation, “that can result in meaningful increases in caloric intake.”
20. You shop on end-caps.
You know how you’ll be pushing your cart around a grocery store on your way to a specific aisle when you stop at the end cap because something caught your eye? Manufacturers, like Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, will stock the ends of aisles with junk food that you otherwise would only see if you went down a center aisle. It’s not just end-caps that are riddled with junk. You’ll also find products these companies want to push in the middle of an aisle or heavily-trafficked areas. To make matters even worse, supermarkets are smart and will “cross promote” items. So while you might be on the lookout for strawberries, you may end up with strawberries, whipped cream, and angel food cake. Stick to your list to avoid these junk foods that are so unhealthy they’re evil.
21. You buy sale items.
Yes, you’re saving money, but you won’t be saving calories. An American Journal of Preventive Medicine study confirmed that because shoppers are highly motivated by lower prices, both manufacturers and retailers manipulate and influence customer choices by putting products on sale and offering coupons. And—you guessed it—these coupons can get you to buy products you otherwise wouldn’t, and most of the time, they’re not going to be great for you.
22. You buy the ‘premium’ products.
Treat yo’ self! Really, you can, but don’t do it just because an item is expensive. A Journal of Consumer Research study found that high prices can be used to signal a “premium” product, which can entice you to indulge in a food more so than a generic brand. (It also increases your enjoyement of a product.) So while that $40 bottle of wine might sound enticing, at least make sure you’re sticking to portion control while serving.
23. You fall for buy-one-get-one deals.
It’s pretty straightforward: did you only need one box of cookies? Probably. Did you get two because there was a buy-one-get-one special? Yes. The CSPI reports that this marketing tactic used in grocery stores is extremely successful, and customers ultimately buy more than they plan—which means you have more calories to consume. Here’s a useful tip: many times, like at Whole Foods, you only need to buy one product and you’ll still get the deal.
24. You buy multi-packs.
Similar to the tip before, if you only need one can of soup, opt for one. Multi-packs of soup, chips, candy, and other junk foods, can leave you with more food and calories than you budgeted for.
25. You opt for a cart instead of a basket.
Of course, if you’re doing a weekly grocery haul, it’s probably for the best that you grab a cart; however, if you’re just stopping in to grab a few items, make sure to grab a basket. If you have to carry a basket on your arm, you’re more likely to be deterred from buying more than you planned for because the weight of your groceries will take a toll on your tired arms. For more tips to get the most out of your food shopping, don’t miss these best supermarket shopping tips ever!
Read the original article on Eat This, Not That!
26/26 SLIDES
Why you should always read nutrition labels
If a food item entices you enough to grab it off the shelf, it’s important to always read and understand its nutrition facts and ingredients before you buy it (and eat it).
For one, a whopping 74{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} of packaged foods in grocery stores are made with added sugars, according to a study published in the Journal of Academy of Nutrtion and Dietetics. And diets high in “bad stuff” like sugar, saturated fats, and salt can lead to severe health problems, such as obesity, diabetes, and heart disease.
All “healthy snacks” aren’t created equally, either. For instance, hummus is generally known to be nutritious—but if you compare labels and ingredients across brands, you’ll see that some are made with less-desirable ingredients like soybean oil, excess sodium, and hard-to-pronounce preservatives. (BTW, Eat This, Not That! regularly does the label-reading for you to determine the best brands to be buying. For instance, here are the 7 best healthy hummus brands to buy.)
If you have food allergies and sensitivities, that’s another important reason to double-check what exactly is in a food item before you buy it.
The information on nutrition labels is there for you to be a smart consumer—and sometimes, it’s even right there on the front of the package. Taking the extra few seconds to read packaging labels before taking food home will benefit you and your health in the long run.
The good news is that according to the same report, 66{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} of people said they will pay more attention to food labels and packaging moving forward.
For more healthy eating news, make sure to sign up for our newsletter.
Read the original article on Eat This, Not That!
108 Most Popular Sodas Ranked by How Toxic They Are
By now, you’re well aware that soda is, well, dangerous. It’s the one drink you should simply refrain from drinking whenever you can. In fact, it just might be contributing to that soda belly of yours.
In a study of about 1,000 adults over the course of six years, people who drank soda or other sugar-sweetened beverages gained an extra 1.8 pounds of visceral fat—the fat that sits inside your gut, damaging your internal organs and pushing your belly out. And visceral fat has been shown to increase your risk of heart disease, stroke, and diabetes, among other ills. Yikes.
So why is soda so good at making us look bad? It’s the sugar. The American Heart Association recommends women consume no more than 100 calories (25 grams or 6 teaspoons) per day on sugar and men no more than 150 calories (36 grams or 9 teaspoons) per day.
This amount is about 20 grams less than the usual 45 grams of sugar found in many sodas and other sweetened beverages. And if it’s not sugar, then it’s artificial sweetener, which is 180 times sweeter than sugar and more damaging to your waistline.
To help you make better choices, we’ve ranked the more than 100 of the most popular sodas. We look at calories, sodium, carbs, sugar and examined each can’s ingredients and gave demerits to sodas with more chemicals and additives than those that were nutritionally similar.
Click through to see where your favorite fizzy drinks fall in our best and worst sodas list, ranked from worst-to-best. (Although, “best” still doesn’t mean healthy!) And if you’re looking for other beverages to cut from your shopping list, check out the 50 Drinks With More Sugar Than a Hershey’s Bar.
108. Crush Pineapple
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 190 calories, 65 mg sodium, 52 g carbs (51 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Acacia Gum, Yellow 5, Brominated, Soybean Oil, Yellow 6
If you think choosing a fruit-based soda is a better option for your health, well, that’s just not true. With 51 grams of sugar in one can, any variation of Crush soda is just a landfill of sugar. Plus, the pineapple flavor contains soybean oil, which has been linked to weight gain. Speaking of weight gain, be sure to stay away from these 7 Snacks That Are Causing You to Gain Weight.
107. Sunkist Pineapple
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 190 calories, 60 mg sodium, 51 g carbs (51 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Acacia Gum, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Ester Gum, Yellow 5, Yellow 6
The yellow color of this soda doesn’t come from an actual pineapple. That’s all thanks to additives Yellow #5 and Yellow #6, with Yellow #5 even causing allergic-type reactions in some.
106. Crush Peach
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 190 calories, 65 mg sodium, 50 g carbs (49 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Acacia Gum, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Ester Gum, Red 40, Yellow 5
If you ate 12 chocolate glazed munchkins from Dunkin’, you would still consume less sugar than one can of Crush Peach soda. Eating an actual peach? That brings in just about 13 grams of natural sugar—no HFCS in sight.
105. Stewart’s Cherries ‘n Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 190 calories, 70 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Red 40, Blue 1
While the bright hue of this soda may lure drinkers in, with 46 grams of sugar, it’s best to think twice before taking a sip. Instead, opt for actual strawberries with some whipped cream.
104. Sunkist Fruit Punch
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 60 mg sodium, 49 g carbs (48 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural And Artificial Flavors, Ester Gum, Red 40
Fruit punch is always a rather risky drink choice, as sugar tends to be high, so it’s no surprise this fruit punch soda isn’t necessarily the best option.
103. Fanta Pineapple
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 50 mg sodium, 48 g carbs (48 g sugar)
Ingredients (Pineapple): Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Modified Food Starch, Potassium Sorbate And Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Sodium Citrate, Coconut Oil, Salt, Sucrose Acetate Isobutyrate, Yellow 5, Yellow 6
With this long list of ingredients, it’s interesting to note that pineapple is not blatantly listed as a main component of this soft drink, but there are plenty of different types of sugar here.
102. Fanta Mango
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 40 mg sodium, 49 g carbs (48 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Potassium Sorbate (To Protect Taste), Malic Acid, Acacia Gum, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Yellow 6
Just eating a real mango is much cleaner for your health than this beverage. You’ll notice that it, along with many other sodas, contains the thickener gum acacia. It not only has been said to cause flatulence and stomach discomfort in some people when ingested in high quantities but according to A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives, it can also cause allergic reactions such as a skin rash or an asthmatic attack.
And for more helpful tips, be sure to sign up for our newsletter to get daily recipes and food news in your inbox!
101. Mug Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 60 mg sodium, 47 g carbs, 47 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Citric Acid, Caramel Color, Calcium Disodium EDTA (to protect flavor)
You would have to down 12 servings of Reddi-Wip to equal the calorie count of Mug Cream Soda—and would still need to eat 12 Hershey’s Kisses on top of that to equal the sugar count.
100. Mountain Dew Live Wire
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 65 mg sodium, 46 g carbs, 46 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Concentrated Orange Juice, Natural and Artificial Flavor, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Caffeine, Sodium Citrate, Gum Arabic, Yellow 6, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Flavor), Yellow 5, Red 40
This version of Mountain Dew is “sparked with orange,” both natural and artificial orange flavor, that is.
99. Mountain Dew Code Red
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 105 mg sodium, 46 g carbs, 46 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Orange Juice Concentrate, Citric Acid, Sodium Hexametaphosphate (To protect flavor), Sodium Benzoate (Preserves freshness), Natural Flavor, Caffeine, Sodium Citrate, Gum Arabic, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To protect flavor), Red 40, Brominated Vegetable Oil, Yellow 5, Blue 1
As we said, Europe and Japan have already banned the flame retardant brominated vegetable oil (BVO) out of their bubbly beverages. If you’re truly trying to get a six-pack, don’t do the Dew in any variation and instead scroll through this comprehensive list of foods that uncover your abs.
98. Mountain Dew
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 60 mg sodium, 46 g carbs, 46 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Concentrated Orange Juice, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Caffeine, Sodium Citrate, Erythorbic Acid (Preserves Freshness), Gum Arabic, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Flavor), Brominated Vegetable Oil, Yellow 5
The lime-green soda contains brominated vegetable oil or BVO, a patented flame retardant that acts as an emulsifier in citrus-flavored soda drinks. It’s been banned in Europe and Japan before, and there have even been some reports that those who drank an excessive amount of sodas containing BVO suffered memory loss and skin and nerve problems.
97. Mountain Dew White Out
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 60 mg sodium, 46 g carbs, 46 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Gum Arabic, Caffeine, Sodium Citrate, Glycerol Ester of Rosin, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Flavor)
This version of the Dew was actually chosen by fans of the classic drink, so the flavor surely is something special. So what exactly is White Out soda? Well, it’s described as “a white blast of smooth citrus flavored Mountain Dew” and it is foggy white in color. All we’re getting from this nutrition breakdown and ingredients list is that it’s something you just should avoid drinking! And be sure to stay away from These Sodas With More Sugar Than 4 Donuts.
96. A&W Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 70 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Yucca Extract, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Caffeine
A&W traffics heavily in the nostalgia of the roadside restaurant—the company created the nation’s first chain of them in 1923. But their cream soda is a mix of HFCS and artificial colors and flavors. This is not your grandparents’ soda, in the worst way possible.
95. A&W Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 80 mg sodium, 47 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Natural and Artificial Flavors, Quillaia Extract
You gotta love that label: This American classic claims it’s “Made with Aged Vanilla” but we see no mention of “Vanilla Extract” in the ingredients list. Throw in two scoops of vanilla ice cream to make a Root Beer float, and you have more than two day’s worth of sugar in one chilled mug.
94. Crush Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 70 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caramel Color, Red 40, Acacia Gum, Blue 1
Oh caramel color. It’s a very common additive you’ll find in many sodas, coffee drinks, salad dressings, and soup, but it’s also a potential carcinogen.
93. Crush Strawberry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 70 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Acacia Gum, Caramel Color, Red 40, Natural And Artificial Flavors
There seems to be no mention of any actual strawberries in this ingredient list, with “natural” flavors coming in last behind HFCS, caramel color, and Red #40.
92. Mello Yello
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 50 mg sodium, 47 g carbs (46 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Concentrated Orange Juice, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Sodium Benzoate and Calcium Disodium EDTA (to Protect Taste), Potassium Citrate, Caffeine, Yellow 5, Carob Bean Gum
This soda—like many others on this list—is sweetened with HFCS, which makes for a shocking sugar count. It’s also colored with that pesky food dye, Yellow #5, a food dye that studies have linked to hyperactivity in children.
91. Stewart’s Orange ‘n Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 180 calories, 80 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Citric Acid, Orange Juice Concentrate, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Modified Corn Starch, Ester Gum, Yellow 6
If you’re looking for a refreshing summer treat with this classic flavor combo, you’re better off eating the classic Creamsicle ice cream bar that’s only 100 calories and 12 grams of sugar.
90. Stewart’s Grape Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 180 calories, 70 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Tartaric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Citric Acid, Artificial Flavors, Red 40, Acacia Gum, Blue 1
This soda sure won’t taste like actual grapes and it contains Blue #1, a food dye that the Center for Science in the Public Interest recommended consumers be wary of.
89. Dr. Brown’s Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 25 mg sodium, 44 g carbs, 44 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Citric Acid, Caramel Color
This soda has more calories than a Mountain Dew (though with less artificial colors, thus the better ranking).
88. Norka Cherry-Strawberry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 0 g fat (0 g saturated fat), 15 mg sodium, 44 g carbs (0 g fiber, 43 g sugar), 0 g protein.
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavor, Citric Acid, Potassium Sorbate, Sodium Benzoate, Gum Acacia, FD&C Red #40, Glycerol, Ester Of Wood Rosin
This is another example of don’t let the colorful packaging fool you. This oh-so-sweet soda is chock-full of sugar and toxic ingredients.
87. Dr. Brown’s Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 30 mg sodium, 42 g carbs, 42 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Gum Acacia, Citric Acid
You know when you add some Mentos to a two-liter Diet Coke and the whole thing explodes? (Don’t try that at home.) That’s thanks to the Gum Acacia in the candy, which is listed in A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives as a natural emulsifier and is in the soda, too. Despite its weird name, it’s probably the most natural ingredient in this sugar juice. Think you’re having too much of the sweet stuff? Here are 16 Subtle Signs You’re Eating Too Much Sugar.
86. A-Treat Blue Razz
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 165 calories, 41 g carbs, 30 mg sodium, 41 g sugar, 0 g protein
triple-filtered carbonated water, high fructose corn syrup, natural and artificial flavoring, citric acid, gum acacia, ester gum, fd&c blue #1, preserved with sodium benzoate, contains no caffeine
This raspberry flavored drink has more sugar than three Dunkin Donuts glazed donuts. If that isn’t a red flag, we don’t know what is.
85. RC Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 40 mg sodium, 43 g carbs, 42 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Natural Flavors, Acacia Gum
Its name refers to “royal crown cola” and it was developed by a pharmacist. With HFCS, caramel color, and 42 grams of sugar in one can, there are much better soda options out there for you.
84. Surge
Nutrition (per 16 fl oz can): 230 calories, 50 mg sodium, 62 g carbs (56 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Maltodextrin, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Orange Juice Concentrate, Potassium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Potassium Citrate, Caffeine, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Taste), Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Carob Bean Gum, Blue 1
It’s not uncommon for “sodium and potassium benzoate are added to some diet soft drinks and fruit drinks,” Leslie Bonci, RD, tells us. Unfortunately—especially because Surge contains OJ—”they can form benzene, which is a carcinogen when combined with vitamin C, the ascorbic acid in juice or soda,” she says.
83. Jarritos Mandarin Soda
Nutrition (12.5 fl oz bottle): 181 calories, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Sugar, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (as preservative), Yellow 6, Red 40
That Yellow 6 and Red 40 seems to be a repeat combo offender. And for 45 grams of sugar, ditch the fizzy stuff and go for a fresh mandarin orange isntead.
82. Stewart’s Key Lime Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 180 calories, 65 mg sodium, 44 g carbs (44 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Acacia Gum, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Ester Gum, Brominated Vegetable Oil, Yellow 5, Blue 1
With this list of ingredients, you’re much better off making a key lime pie and eating that instead!
81. Sun Drop Caffeine Free
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 55 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Citric Acid, Orange Juice Concentrate, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural Flavors, Acacia Gum, Yellow 5, Ester Gum, Brominated Vegetable Oil
The caffeine-free version of this citrus pop was created because of consumers’ requests for one in 2002, but it comes in with more calories than the original flavor.
80. Sun Drop
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 170 calories, 55 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Citric Acid, Orange Juice Concentrate, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caffeine, Natural Flavors, Acacia Gum, Yellow 5, Ester Gum, Brominated Vegetable Oil
Despite its name and flavor, this soda isn’t an orange hue like you would expect. Still, it contains Yellow 5, which gives it that distinct color.
79. Sun Drop Cherry Lemon Citrus
c
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 55 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Citric Acid, Orange Juice Concentrate, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caffeine, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Caramel Color, Acacia Gum, Red 40, Yellow 5, Ester Gum, Brominated Vegetable Oil
The cherry lemon flavor is really packing when it comes to the ingredients—caramel color, Red 40, and Yellow 5. No thanks.
78. Mountain Dew Pitch Black
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 55 mg sodium, 45 g carbs, 45 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Caffeine, Gum Arabic, Sodium Citrate, Red 40, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Flavor), Sucralose Acetate Isobutyrate, Blue 1
This soda takes classic Mountain Dew and ramps it up with a twist of citrus and dark fruit flavors, but we’re not seeing any actual fruit listed here!
77. Fanta Berry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 65 mg sodium, 41 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Citrate, Malic Acid, Potassium Sorbate and Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Blue 1
If you just ate some actual blueberries, you wouldn’t consume any Blue 1 like you get from this soda. Why not munch on any of these 9 Best Fruits for Weight Loss, Approved by a Nutritionist to get your fruit fix the right way?
76. Hires Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 120 mg sodium, 46 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Phosphoric Acid, Quillaia Extract, Natural And Artificial Flavors
This root beer was created by a pharmacist who introduced the first Hires Root Beer back in 1876, and many people actually owned Hires Root Beer Kits, which let families brew their own root beer right at home.
75. Dr. Brown’s Black Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 25 mg sodium, 45 g carbs, 45 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Cherry And Other Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), and Artificial Color (Red 40)
Dr. Brown’s Black Cherry would horrify most doctors—and not just because of the sweet stuff. Like Stewart’s cherry flavor—and many of the colored sodas here—this one has the artificial color Red 40.
74. Crush Watermelon
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 65 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural And Artificial Flavors, Red 40
Sipping on a watermelon soda can’t be all that bad, right? Sorry to disappoint, but you’re much better off simply eating watermelon or adding the fruit to some water than sipping on this sugar-filled soda.
73. Barq’s Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 70 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Citric Acid, Caffeine, Artificial And Natural Flavors, Acacia
Barq’s Root Beer overall has a slightly less horrifying chemical profile than its competition.
72. Barq’s Creme Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 65 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Caramel Color, Citric Acid
Barq’s creme soda fairs slighting better than its root beer, thanks to being 5 milligrams less in sodium.
71. Barq’s Red Creme Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 60 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (45 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Citric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Red 40
Does anyone even know what red creme flavor is? It’s for sure not a natural combination!
70. Fanta Grape
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 40 mg sodium, 44 g carbs, 44 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavors, Tartaric Acid, Potassium Sorbate and Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Citric Acid, Red 40, Blue 1
Liquefy a bag of Skittles to equal the sweetness of this can of corn syrup, citric acid, and artificial colors. In fact, that bag of Skittles has similar ingredients, including Red 40.
69. Fanta Orange
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 55 mg sodium, 44 g carbs, 44 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Natural Flavors, Modified Food Starch, Sodium Polyphosphates, Glycerol Ester Of Rosin, Yellow 6, Red 40
I don’t know about you, but after a long day of hard work and play, I like to sit back and relax and crack open a can of Glycerol Ester Of Rosin (said no one ever). The wood resin is added to fruit sodas to help the fruit-flavored oils mix better with the water. While it’s not necessarily harmful, let us repeat: you’re drinking oil and water.
68. Fanta Strawberry
12 fl oz can: 160 calories, 45 mg sodium, 45 g carbs (44 g sugar)
Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (to protect taste), Red 40
We’re not so sure what the 100{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9} natural flavors are that are boasted about on the can, but there must be some strawberry in here then, in the midst of all those other additives.
67. Stewart’s Wishniak Black Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 180 calories, 70 mg sodium, 44 g carbs, 43 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Citric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavor, Sodium Benzoate, Caramel Color, Red 40, Blue 1
With more sugar than seven Chewy Chips Ahoy cookies, Stewart’s Black Cherry would be a “Not That!” because of the sweetness alone—it’s one of the most caloric on this list. And, like many of the soda found here, it also contains the additive caramel coloring. Along with not sipping on this drink, make sure you don’t buy any of The 32 Unhealthiest Snacks On the Planet either!
66. Boylan Shirley Temple
180 calories, 30 mg sodium, 43 g carbs, 43 g sugar
Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Fruit And Vegetable Juice For Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness)
This childhood favorite is even cuter in a bottle, and although it is high in calories and sugar, it scores lower on the list for fewer ingredients and its use of fruit and veggie juice for coloring rather than artificial dyes.
65. Stewart’s Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 170 calories, 65 mg sodium, 43 g carbs (43 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Artificial Flavors, Quillaia Extract
43 grams of sugar in one soda is a whole lot, even if it is Stewart’s. This childhood favorite can stay on the shelf.
64. Crush Orange
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 70 mg sodium, 43 g carbs (43 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural Flavors, Modified Corn Starch, Ester Gum, Yellow 6, Salt, Red 40
Orange is the original flavor of Crush sodas, but the amount of sugar, the Yellow 6, and Red 40? All just, well, crushing stuff.
63. Crush Grape
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 65 mg sodium, 43 g carbs (43 g sugar)
Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Tartaric Acid, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural And Artificial Flavors, Acacia Gum, Red 40, Blue 1
With HFCS, Red 40, and Blue 1 in this soda, we think you’d be better off getting real grape flavor from, well, grapes.
62. RC Cherry Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 40 mg sodium, 45 g carbs, 43 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Natural Flavors, Acacia Gum
At 160 calories, these RC drinks weigh in on the more calorie-heavy side of the regular soda options. In fact, for only 30 calories more you could have an entire Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut, and save yourself 33 grams of sugar in the process.
61. Coca-Cola Vanilla
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 35 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural Flavors, Caffeine
It’s probably a good idea to pass on this vanilla coke, if we’re being honest here!
60. Cherry Coca-Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 35 mg sodium, 42 g carbs, 42 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural Flavors, Caffeine
By now, you might start to see some of the most popular sodas for what they really are: carbonated water, HFCS, some acids, and little else. This classic—once made with real cherry juice—is, unfortunately, a variation on a common blend.
59. Sunkist
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 170 calories, 70 mg sodium, 44 g carbs, 43 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Modified Corn Starch, Natural Flavors, Caffeine, Ester Gum, Yellow 6, Red 40
What do you get when you combine carbonated water with High Fructose Corn Syrup and a host of hard-to-pronounce chemicals? This citrus-inspired sip. It gets its alluring orange color from Yellow 5 and Red 40.
58. Mug’s Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 65 mg sodium, 43 g carbs, 43 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (preserves freshness), Citric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Modified Food Starch, Calcium Disodium EDTA (to protect flavor), Quillaia Extract
Quillaia extract? The best (and worst) part of researching these sodas is coming across the many ingredients soda manufacturers add to their concoctions. Quillaia is another tree bark, and it helps your root beer foam up, as A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives points out. Be more scared of the sugar here—you’re basically drinking five root beer-flavored Dum Dums mixed with additives.
57. Wild Cherry Pepsi
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 30 mg sodium, 42 g carbs, 42 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sugar, Phosphoric Acid, Natural Flavor, Caffeine, Citric Acid
Nothing wild here—just the same ingredients as most sodas, and as much sugar as more than three cups of cherries (without containing any cherries). Not sure how to give up soda? We’ve got you covered with I Was Addicted to Soda—Here’s What Helped Me Quit.
56. Cheerwine
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 0 g fat, 25 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients (can): Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Artificial Cherry Flavor, Caffeine, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Flavor), Red 40
But yes, there strikes HFCS, yet again, in the canned version.
55. Virgil’s Handcrafted Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 5 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Filtered Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Caramel Color, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid For Flavor
The root beer is this brand’s original flavor and is actually brewed by hand in small batches.
54. Virgil’s Handcrafted Vanilla Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 5 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Filtered Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Caramel Color, Natural Flavors
All-natural bourbon vanilla is said on the soda’s site to be the secret to this cream soda’s distinct flavor.
53. Virgil’s Handcrafted Orange Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 5 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Filtered Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavors
The website claims, “Only the finest Spanish oranges make a sweet enough juice with just the right citrus zest to flavor this creamy, bold classic,” and with minimum ingredients, we just might believe it.
52. Virgil’s Handcrafted Black Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 150 calories, 5 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (42 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Filtered Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavors
The black cherries here add a tart and tangy flavor to this soda.
51. Crush Blue Raspberry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 60 mg sodium, 41 g carbs (41 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural And Artificial Flavors, Blue 1
Blue raspberry isn’t a naturally-occurring flavor by any means, and the color of this drink comes from you guessed it, Blue 1.
50. Dr Pepper Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 60 mg sodium, 43 g carbs (41 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Caramel Color, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Citric Acid, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Malic Acid, Sodium Phosphate, Red 40
Malic acid is found in here, and according to A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives, it’s used as a way to compensate for the lack of fruit in artificially sweetened fruit, so there really isn’t much actual cherry in this drink.
49. Crush Grapefruit
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 60 mg sodium, 42 g carbs (41 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Acacia Gum, Ester Gum, Calcium Disodium EDTA (protect flavor)
Our childhood nostalgia is crushed: This kid-favorite brand has no actual grapefruit. On the bright side, it has no BVO.
48. Hansen’s Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 0 mg sodium, 41 g carbs (41 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Filtered Water, Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid
Although this ingredients list isn’t as long as others, it still contains caramel color and a high amount of sugar. Pass!
47. Pepsi-Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 30 mg sodium, 41 g carbs, 41 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Sugar, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor
The perennial #2 in the cola wars carries 5 grams more sugar than a 3 Musketeers bar. Let that sink in: One of America’s most popular sodas has that much sugar. Instead of drinking this, make a weight loss smoothie!
46. Pepsi Real Sugar
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 30 mg sodium, 40 g carbs, 40 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Sugar, Caramel Color, Phosphoric, Acid, Caffeine, Natural Flavor
Sugar is the master of disguise. Maltodextrin, brown rice syrup, dextrose, sucrose—the list goes on. But its most well-known costume, as you know after reading this far, is High Fructose Corn Syrup. Pepsi’s hoping you forget it’s all the same sweet stuff, heavily marketing that this version is formulated with sugar and no HFCS. But in a review of five studies comparing the effects of sugar and HFCS, there was no difference found in changes in blood glucose levels, lipid levels, or appetite between table sugar consumption and HFCS consumption. In other words, your body can’t tell one from the other—they’re both just sugar.
45. Dr Pepper
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 55 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caffeine
No, an actual doctor didn’t create this soda but if one did, we like to think there would be a lot less sugar and more natural ingredients.
44. Hansen’s Original Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 0 mg sodium, 41 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Tartaric Acid, Natural Flavor with Extracts of Kola Nuts
Kola nuts are a bonus, but all those acids and caramel color knock this soda down.
43. IBC Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 60 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural and Artificial Flavors, Modified Food Starch, Citric Acid, Quillaia Extract
This soda is now owned by the Dr Pepper/Snapple group and is said to have a “satisfying richness” in flavor.
42. Stewart’s Birch Beer Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 70 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural and Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Yucca Extract, Acacia Gum
Yucca extract is something different compared to other sodas on this list, but still, it’s chock-full of the typical unhealthy soda ingredients.
41. Maine Root. Mexicane Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 165 calories, 35 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Pure Water, Fair Trade Certified Organic Cane Sugar, Spices, Caffeine, Phosphoric Acid
Seeing organic sugar cane is a nice change from HFCS, but phosphoric acid is made from phosphate rock, so that’s just something to keep in mind.
40. Maine Root. Root Beer & Maine Root. Ginger Brew
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 165 calories, 35 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (40 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Pure Water, Fair Trade Certified Organic Cane Sugar, Spices
This soda is basically the same nutrition-wise as the one above it, but comes out in a better spot thanks to its somewhat cleaner list of ingredients.
39. Dr Pepper and Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 55 mg sodium, 40 g carbs (39 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Natural And Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Sodium Phosphate
The combination of Dr Pepper and rich cream soda might take you back to your childhood with just one sip, but that’s all you should have. One can comes packing with nearly 40 grams of sugar creating a combination you’re going to want to stay away from.
38. Fanta Green Apple
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 35 mg sodium, 38 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavors, Malic Acid, Citric Acid Potassium Sorbate And Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Yellow 5, Acacia Gum, Blue 1
38 grams of sugar is quite a lot, whereas eating a cup of green apple slices comes in at only 11 grams of all-natural sugar.
37. 1893 Ginger Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 55 mg sodium, 40 g carbs, 39 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Sugar, Caramel Color, Natural Flavors, Phosphoric Acid, Sodium Citrate, Caffeine, Potassium Sorbate (Preserves Freshness), Modified Food Starch, Kola Nut Extract, Ginger Oleoresin
Don’t let the word “premium” confuse you. There are no premium ingredients here, but at 150 calories and 39 grams of sugar, it’s hard to believe that there are only 11 ingredients in this afternoon pick-me-up. Giving up caffeine is never a bad idea! Need proof? Here’s What Happens to Your Body When You Cut Out Caffeine.
36. 1893 Original Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 150 calories, 55 mg sodium, 40 g carbs, 39 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Sugar, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Sodium Citrate, Natural Flavor, Potassium Sorbate (Protects Freshness), Caffeine, Gum Arabic, Kola Nut Extract
We’re not sure we would call this cola “bold,” but it does have kola nut extract in it, a natural ingredient.
35. Stewart’s Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 150 calories, 70 mg sodium, 38 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural and Artificial Flavors, Citric Acid, Quillaia Extract, Acacia Gum, Yucca Extract
Although this soda was developed to be “the best-tasting root beer,” it certainly isn’t doing you any favors health-wise. If you wouldn’t eat three and half bowls of Apple Jacks, then you should stay away from this root beer. That’s the sugar equivalent of what’s in a 12-ounce can.
34. Pibb Xtra
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 40 mg sodium, 38 g carbs, 38 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Potassium Sorbate And Potassium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Artificial And Natural Flavors, Caffeine, Monosodium Phosphate, Lactic Acid, Polyethylene Glycol
A “spicy” cherry soda found mostly in the South—or in Coke Freestyle machines—Pibb Xtra contains propylene glycol, a preservative, thickening agent, and stabilizer that is found in antifreeze and cosmetics. The soda ranks well because of its calorie count, but we can’t recommend you drink it!
33. 7Up Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 40 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Filtered Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Potassium Benzoate (preservative), Natural Flavors, Red 40
No caramel color—ranking goes up! Red 40—ranking goes down.
32. Coca-Cola Original
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 45 mg sodium, 39 g carbs, 39 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural Flavors, Caffeine
Coca-Cola’s flagship drink is actually less harmful than most of the soda’s on this list. That doesn’t mean you should drink it every day though. Need more proof? This is What Happens to Your Body When You Drink a Coke.
31. 7Up
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 45 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Filtered Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Potassium Citrate, Natural Flavors, Calcium Disodium EDTA (to protect flavor)
Best part of clear sodas: no caramel color. Worst part: They’re still sodas, and otherwise contain the same ingredients as the rest. This classic, now distributed by the Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, has lost market share since its 80s heyday, but remains a crisp drink that’s not much better than a Coke.
30. Dr Pepper Cherry Vanilla
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 60 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Caramel Color, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Citric Acid, Phosphoric Acid, Caffeine, Malic Acid, Red 40
We’re not seeing any cherry or vanilla listed that high on the list of ingredients in this soda. Any doctor would most like tell you skip out on Dr Pepper.
29. Vernors Ginger Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 55 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caramel Color, Natural and Artificial Flavors
This soda claims to have an “authentic bold taste,” but we wish there was more actual ginger prominently used here.
28. Squirt Grapefruit Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 50 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Contains Less Than 2{554322552816a46baa129cc1ab31b2aae22be5e23f407658ace83a643d80b0e9}: Grapefruit Juice Concentrate, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Modified Corn Starch, Ester Gum, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Calcium Disodium EDTA (to Protect Flavor)
Squirt soda was invented in 1938 by Herb Bishop in Phoenix, Arizona, so it’s been around for a while! And while there still is HFCS, it is a lower percentage.
27. Jones Cream Soda
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 160 calories, 35 mg sodium, 38 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Inverted Cane Sugar, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Phosphoric Acid, Sodium Benzoate and Potassium Sorbate (as Preservatives), Calcium Disodium Edta (to Protect Flavor.)
Although it’s a bit higher in calories, this cream soda is made with pure can sugar and not HFCS, making it a better for you option if cream soda is your favorite flavor.
26. Schweppes Raspberry Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 60 mg sodium, 38 g carbs (38 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Natural Flavors, Red 40
If only there was actual raspberry in this soda, and we don’t just mean in the “natural flavors.” If you need more reasons to stock up on actual fruits, here’s What Happens to Your Body When You Don’t Eat Fruits & Veggies.
25. Sierra Mist Natural Lemon-Lime Soda, Made with Real Sugar
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 35 mg sodium, 37 g carbs (37 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Sugar, Natural Flavor, Citric Acid, Potassium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Potassium Citrate, Calcium Disodium EDTA (to Protect Flavor)
This caffeine-free drink is back in its original glory! In July 2018, Sierra Mist returned to its natural formula from 2010, made with real sugar and no stevia. Between 2010 and 2018, Sierra Mist had rebranded to Mist TWST, which was sweetened with high fructose corn syrup and no natural sugar in sight. This tacked on an additional 30 calories and 10 grams of sugar.
24. Orangina
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 160 calories, 40 mg sodium, 39 g carbs (37 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Orange Juice Concentrate, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Orange Pulp, Mandarin Juice Concentrate, Natural Flavors, Grapefruit Juice Concentrate
There is some orange pulp in here, but that doesn’t make it healthy for you, as HFCS is still a main star.
23. Canada Dry Cranberry Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 50 mg sodium, 37 g carbs (36 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Red 40, Blue 1
Not seeing any sign of cranberry here, but there is Red 40, which creates the red hue.
22. Canada Dry Ginger Ale and Lemonade
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 50 mg sodium, 36 g carbs (36 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Clarified, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Sodium Benzoate And Potassium Sorbate (Preservatives), Natural Flavors, Acacia Gum, Ester Gum, Yellow 5
The label touts that it’s “made from real ginger & with real juice,” but the only place we guess that ginger might be lurking is in the “natural flavors.”
21. Canada Dry Blackberry Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 50 mg sodium, 36 g carbs (36 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Caramel Color, Red 40, Blue 1
Blackberries are high in vitamin K and are one of the best high-fiber foods you can eat to help your weight-loss goals. But drinking this isn’t going to give you those same benefits!
20. Canada Dry Green Tea Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 65 mg sodium, 36 g carbs (35 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Green Tea, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C), Calcium Disodium EDTA (to protect flavor)
It’s nice to see green tea actually listed as an ingredient rather high up on the nutrition breakdownn of this soda. But again, don’t let that trick you into thinking it’s a “healthy” beverage choice!
19. Canada Dry Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 50 mg sodium, 36 g carbs (35 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative), Natural Flavors, Caramel Color
Our moms used to give this to us when we had a tummy ache. Now as adults, we get a tummy ache looking at it. The tagline is “Real Ginger, Real Taste” but the main ingredients here are carbonated water and HFCS. But with lower calories than the rest, it ranks rather well on this list.
18. Dr. Brown’s Cel Ray
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 10 mg sodium, 34 g carbs, 34 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Extract of Celery Seed with other Natural Flavors, Sodium Benzoate (Preservative) and Caramel Color
The healthiest-sounding soda on this list nearly is. But unfortunately for the fans of this one, Cel Ray blends actual celery seed extract with HFCS.
17. Hansen’s Key Lime Twist
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 140 calories, 0 mg sodium, 35 g carbs (34 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Citric Acid, Natural Fruit Flavors with Extracts of Lemons and Limes
This soda doesn’t have a laundry list of ingredients, which is refreshing to see, but still, it will set you back a decent amount of sugar. Looking for better ways to satisfy your sweet tooth? Try out any of these 73+ Best Healthy Dessert Recipes for Weight Loss.
16. Reed’s Ginger Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 140 calories, 40 mg sodium, 35 g carbs (33 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Filtered Water (Sweetened by a Blend of Raw Cane Sugar, Pineapple Juice From Concentrate and Honey), Fresh Ginger Root, Lemon and Lime Juices From Concentrate and Spices
While the sugar isn’t the lowest in this soda, the list of ingredients is pretty clean overall, making it a better-for-you choice.
15. Seagram’s Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 130 calories, 40 mg sodium, 33 g carbs, 33 g sugar
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Potassium Sorbate (To Protect Taste), Caramel Color, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste), Ginger
This soda doesn’t seem like it’s all that bad but it does still have one big caveat: Lisa Moskovitz, RD, founder of The NY Nutrition Group, says “…high fructose corn syrup, which has been shown to increase appetite and, over time, lead to health problems such as obesity and diabetes.” Yeah, yeah, you knew it was bad, but hear us again: HFCS is bad! Still, Seagram’s Ginger Ale has a lower calorie count than most.
14. Blue Sky Root Beer
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 130 calories, 0 mg sodium, 32 g carbs (32 g sugar)
Ingredients: Filtered Carbonated Water, Invert Cane Sugar, Natural Root Beer Flavor, Caramel Color, Citric Acid
Blue Sky prides itself on being a simple soda that is “crafted for real” as its website states.
13. Seagram’s Tonic Water
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 120 calories, 30 mg sodium, 33 g carbs (32 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Quinine And Natural Flavors, Potassium Sorbate (To Protect Taste)
This soda isn’t nearly as high in calories as others on this list, but there’s that HFCS and still 32 grams of sugar, so keep that in mind when cracking open one of these cans.
12. Schweppes Ginger Ale
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 120 calories, 60 mg sodium, 33 g carbs, (32 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (preservative), Natural Flavors, Natural Colors
This soda has as much HFCS-derived sugar as 10 croissants, and we don’t see ginger on the actual list, unfortunately.
11. Blue Sky Cola
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 130 calories, 0 mg sodium, 31 g carbs (31 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Filtered Water, Invert Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Tartaric Acid
This is a truly classic cola. Well, as classic as soda can get, as there is still caramel color, but no HFCS!
10. Ale 8 Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 120 calories 30 mg sodium, 30 g carbs, (30 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated water, sugar, vegetable glycerin, natural cherry flavor, fruit and vegetable juice (color), natural flavors, citric acid, sodium benzoate (preservatives), ginger, phosphoric acid, caffeine.
Props to Ale 8 for being the only cherry soda here that doesn’t use red dye 40 to give their pop a bold hue. This Kentucky-based brand swaps the red dye with natural colors from fruit and vegetable juices, and unlike many of the ginger ales the list, it actually includes fresh ginger in their brew.
9. Caleb’s Kola
Nutrition (10 fl oz bottle): 110 calories, 50 mg sodium, 29 g carbs (29 g sugar)
Ingredients: Sparkling Water, Fair-Trade-Certified Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Phosphoric Acid, Natural Flavor, Sodium Citrate, Caffeine, Gum Arabic, Citric Acid, Kola Nut Extract
This soda’s key ingredient is the kola nut extract, which has a slightly bitter flavor and a little bit of caffeine. The soda has a distinct amount of foam when it’s poured, too.
8. Blue Sky Lemon Lime
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 110 calories, 0 mg sodium, 28 g carbs (28 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Filtered Water, Invert Cane Sugar, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors
A short list of ingredients and cane sugar? If you really need to sip on a lemon-lime soda, this is the best one.
7. Sprite
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 100 calories, 45 mg sodium, 27 g carbs (27 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors, Sodium Citrate, Sodium Benzoate (To Protect Taste)
Although Sprite is on the lower end of calories and sugar in one can, it still has a long list of ingredients including HFCS. It’s a soda Often promoted by the athletes, but we can’t really imagine LeBron and friends guzzling a can of carbonated corn syrup before a game…
6. Blue Sky Black Cherry
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 110 calories, 0 mg sodium, 27 g carbs (26 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Filtered Water, Invert Cane Sugar, Citric Acid, Natural Flavors
If you want to sip on something cherry-flavored, this is the soda you go for, as it’s the least offensive of the other options on this list.
5. Mountain Dew Ice
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 100 calories, 55 mg sodium, 25 g carbs, (25 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, High Fructose Corn Syrup, Natural Flavor, Clarified Lemon Juice Concentrate, Citric Acid, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Caffeine, Acesulfame Potassium, Sodium Citrate, Sucralose, Calcium Disodium EDTA (To Protect Flavor)
This Mountain Dew flavor boasts that it contains “a splash of real juice.” And while it still has a rather long ingredients list and far too much sodium, it does clock in at only 100 calories and 25 grams of sugar, which is a lot less than other Mountain Dew flavors.
4. Moxie
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 100 calories, 25 mg sodium, 25 g carbs, (25 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated water, high fructose corn syrup and/or sugar, natural and artificial flavors, caramel color, sodium benzoate (a preservative), gentian root extractives, phosphoric acid, caffeine, and citric acid.
Known for its distinguished bitter flavor, this soda was one of the first to be mass-produced in the U.S. Whether or not you like the unique taste of this old fashioned cola, it isn’t the worst thing you could drink for your health. In fact, gentian root extractives, the ingredient that gives it its bitter flavor, is actually used for medicinal properties, and has been shown to calm an upset stomach.
3. Dry Sparkling Ginger
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 65 calories, 0 mg sodium, 16 g carbs (16 g sugar)
Ingredients: Purified Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavor, Phosphoric Acid
A small list of ingredients is something we can get behind. The ginger flavor is promised to be “bold and spicy,” too.
2. Dry Sparkling Vanilla
Nutrition (12 fl oz bottle): 60 calories, 0 mg sodium, 16 g carbs (16 g sugar)
Ingredients: Purified Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Natural Flavor, Phosphoric Acid
The vanilla variation of this soda sneaks ahead of its ginger sister flavor, thanks to it being 5 calories less. Think of this drink as the better-for-you cream soda.
1. Coca-Cola Life
Nutrition (12 fl oz can): 90 calories, 35 mg sodium, 24 g carbs, (24 g sugar)
Ingredients: Carbonated Water, Cane Sugar, Caramel Color, Natural Flavors, Phosphoric Acid, Potassium Benzoate (to Protect Taste), Caffeine, *stevia Leaf Extract (Steviol Glycosides Processed From Stevia Leaf)
Although Coke Life is sweetened with stevia, it’s certainly not a “diet” beverage. A can of this still packs 24 grams of sugar and is 90 calories. Still, that’s much less than other traditional colas on the market. And the ingredients are pretty simple, too—sweetened with cane sugar and stevia, there’s no HFCS, which is a bonus. At less than 100 calories a can, this is definitely the best of the regular sodas (although that still doesn’t make it healthy!) Fore more truths about the fizzy stuff, here are 40 Side Effects of Drinking Too Much Soda.
109/109 SLIDES