Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

the other side of agave

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

www.agavemythbuster.com

Friday, April 2, 2010

Madhava’s Agave Nectar - Clearing Things Up

A. What constitutes Madhava's Agave Nectar?

There are 3 main components of our Agave Nectar. It is naturally composed

primarily of the simple sugars fructose, glucose (dextrose), and water.

Madhava's Agave is Certified Organic and is Genetically Modified Organism (GMO)

Free.

B. How is Madhava's Agave Nectar produced?

The Agave plant is truly a remarkable plant! It grows in the harshest

environments with little water and no upkeep is needed. It is naturally found in

Western Mexico making it a non-invasive plant to the area regarding its growth

and harvest. It requires no pesticides or fertilizers and is actually a

cornerstone to its ecosystem. The Agave plant is truly a sustainably

grown/harvested crop.

The Agave plant is grown for 6-8 years, then before turning to seed, it is then

harvested by hand. Jimadores or Agave harvesters go to the selected fields and

remove the " Pina " or heart of the Agave plant, by cutting off the long spiny

" leaves " and unearthing it from the soil. It is all done by hand thus reducing

the carbon footprint during harvesting. The Pinas are then loaded to a truck

which takes them back to the harvesting facility.

There are two methods of making the Agave Nectar from the juice of the plant.

One uses a natural non-GMO enzyme and the second uses thermal hydrolysis. Both

processes achieve the same goal; which is to separate the naturally occurring

Fructans, which are complex sugar molecules into their simple sugar components

fructose and glucose.

The actual process of hydrolysis of agave, either thermal or enzymatic, is

unlike the process of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), which creates fructose

out of the glucose made from the milled starch of corn. Agave Nectar simply

separates Fructans or Inulin, a complex naturally occurring sugar, into Fructose

and Glucose.

C. Moderation vs. Overconsumption

It is certainly true that overconsumption of any one or a combination of sugars

can have detrimental effects, but this is not in a vacuum, it involves

lifestyles, other food choices and other conditions. Overconsumption of any food

or beverage will have ramifications. Sweeteners are ingredients which are added

to foods in relatively small quantity to make them more palatable. In others,

sugars can make up a large portion of the caloric value. These foods are easy to

identify and avoid as necessary. People do not consume sweeteners as a solitary

food in mass quantity. They are just part of the choices people make and

consumption can be controlled, each of us chooses what we eat and how much.

There are no health issues with moderate consumption of sweeteners; every

negative circulating is relative to the overall consumption of one's diet.

Myth vs. Truth

Myth:  Agave is mainly a starch, such as corn or rice.

Truth:  Agave contains Fructans or Inulin, not starch.  Fructans are a

naturally occurring polysaccharide or complex sugar consisting of Fructose and

Glucose.  Certain plants produce Fructans which is a form of energy storage.

Most plants that synthesize/store Fructans do not store other material such as

starch.

Myth: Agave Nectar uses Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) enzymes much the

same as High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS).

Truth: Enzymatic hydrolysis (one of two processes of deriving agave nectar) uses

a Non-GMO enzyme to separate the complex sugars found in Fructans.  No

refinement beyond the evaporation of water is involved.  

Myth: Hydrolysis is bad for you.

Truth: Hydrolysis in its simplest form is the separation of molecules. 

Everyday our body naturally performs simple hydrolysis in the conversion of

energy for our daily tasks.  In the process of Agave Nectar we are taking a

complex molecule such as Fructan and separating it into natural molecules your

body can absorb called Fructose and Glucose.  This is the same exact process of

how bees make honey.  The nectar is hydrolyzed by an enzyme in the bee’s

stomach and then they fan their wings to evaporate the natural water before

capping the comb.

Myth: Agave Nectar is produced the same way as High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS).

Truth: There are two methods of making the Agave Nectar from the juice of the

plant. One uses a non-GMO enzyme and the second is via thermal hydrolysis. Both

process achieve the same goal which is to separate the naturally occurring

Fructans which are complex sugar molecules into their simple sugar components

fructose and glucose.

Unlike the process of High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), which creates fructose

out of the glucose from the starch found in milled Corn, Agave Nectar simply

separates Fructans or Inulin, a complex naturally occurring sugar into Fructose

and Glucose.

Our producers do not use any sort of chemicals in the process and no foreign

material is being added such as HFCS. Filtration and evaporation of excess

moisture are the rest of the process. The evaporation is done in a vacuum

evaporator.

Myth: Agave Nectar can produce miscarriages.

Truth:  No research has pointed that Blue Agave contains Anodin and Dinordin,

the steroid derivatives with contraceptive effects that could lead to a

miscarriage. This is clearly a cruel scare tactic. The truth is that there are

many types of saponins and they are in a lot of foods we eat. Most beans and

legumes, soya beans, onions, paprika, alfalfa - these all contain various

saponins. Saponins are phytosterol compounds that occur naturally in some

plants. Saponins have antimicrobial and antifungal properties, along with

anti-inflammatory and immune-stimulating properties.

From the prehispanic times, the only sweet treat available to Indians in Mexico

was the cooked leaves of the agave plant. They are still in markets all over

Mexico. If there would be any kind of dangerous substance, this would be the

absolute extreme case of exposure to it; not a single case of any problem has

ever been reported, this goes back over 700 years.

Agave Nectar in its present form has been sold for over 12 years all over the

world, including western Europe, Japan and the U.S.. The product has a proven

record of safety and is deemed safe by the FDA and all regulatory bodies all

over the world and there has never been a report of agave nectar linked to a

miscarriage.

Myth: Agave Nectar is adulterated or mixed with HFCS.

Truth: Madhava's Agave Nectar does not contain corn syrup, corn products, or any

adulteration of any sort. Guaranteed. Our Agave Nectar is 100% pure from the

agave plant with no additives whatsoever.

We package our agave nectar at our facility in the foothills of the Colorado

Rockies. Madhava's Quality Control representatives routinely visit and inspect

all our suppliers’ facilities in Mexico. The suppliers are Organically

Certified and 3rd party audited or currently in the process. In addition our

facility in Colorado is USDA Organic Certified and we are routinely audited.

Myth: Agave Nectar may have adverse side effects such as mineral depletion,

liver inflammation, hardening of the arteries, insulin resistance leading to

diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, obesity and more.

Truth: This is an unfounded scare tactic. Moderate use of Agave Nectar will not

directly lead to the above mentioned consequences. The issue is overconsumption

and poor dietary choices.

“Inaccurate information from ostensibly reliable sources and selective

presentation of research under extreme experimental conditions, representing

neither the human diet nor HFCS have misled the uninformed and created an

atmosphere of distrust and avoidance for what, by all rights, should be

considered a safe and innocuous sweetener.†– White, S. The Journal of

Nutrition. We believe this applies to agave as well.

Supporting data has been misused.  The studies that have been conducted have

measured metabolic upsets under extreme conditions.  They have used pure 100%

fructose versus pure glucose at very high concentrations.  These conditions do

not reflect the American diet or the composition of fructose containing

sweeteners.  The methods have been inappropriate for assessing the safety of

these dietary macronutrients.  Even pure water triggers adverse health effects

at these high repeat doses.  The Journal of Nutrition (2009). Supplement:  The

State of Science on Dietary Sweeteners Containing Fructose.

Myth: Fructose is a harmful sugar that creates obesity.

Truth: Fructose is a simple sugar found in many foods. Fructose recently has

been mis-linked as a harmful sugar, but the issue really lies in general with

consumption or overconsumption to be exact. Certainly consuming large amounts of

sweeteners of any kind will be detrimental to one's health. Suggesting fructose

could cause health issues when concentrated amounts are eaten is a statement

which should really apply to the overconsumption issue. Anti-sweetener advocates

fail to realize the issue regarding fructose or really any sugar is the

overconsumption. Used in moderation, sugars serve a purpose, to provide fuel for

energy and to make other foods and beverages more palatable. While we respect

the choice to not consume sweeteners and elect for an apple or piece of fruit

for those sweet cravings you might have, the moderate use of Agave Nectar or

really any natural sweetener will not create issues such as obesity, liver

inflammation, etc. As always moderation and a balance diet are keys to one's

health. It is a misconception that fructose sweeteners have given rise to

increased consumption of total calories. The line graph below shows that total

per capita energy intake increased 24% in the U.S. between 1970 and 2005. Over

the same period of time, the graph also shows that flour/cereal products and

fats increased 3-5% of total caloric intake, and caloric intake of added sugars,

vegetables, fruit, dairy and meat/eggs/nuts declined. The increase in total

caloric intake in the U.S. was not caused by added sugars; rather, we are eating

more of everything! - The Journal of Nutrition (2009). Supplement: The State of

Science on Dietary Sweeteners Containing Fructose.

Myth: Agave Nectar is refined fructose and unrecognized (digested) in the body.

Truth: Fructose or levulose is a simple sugar, sugar does not lack or contain

nutrients; if it did, it would no longer be a sugar. Sugar exists as a single

substance or nutrient, just as amino acids and fats exist as a single substance

or nutrients. Digestion is the process of breaking down structurally complex

food into smaller, absorbable units by the enzymes produced within the digestive

system. Since fructose is already in a form that is small, it can be absorbed

without digestion. Not only is fructose recognized as a food source by the body

(hence the increase in body fat when over consumed), the body naturally makes

fructose as it is the main energy source of sperm cells.

Myth: Fructose can lead to an increase in triglycerides.

Truth: To quote from the International Food Information Council website:

http://ific.org/publications/qa/fructoseqa.cfm?renderforprint=1

“Triglyceride is a technical term for fat that occurs in food and in the body.

Both dietary fat and carbohydrates contribute to the formation of triglycerides

in the body but in different ways. Excess consumption of calories from fats,

proteins, or carbohydrates- including starches and sugars-promotes accumulation

of body fatâ€.

Triglycerides are a normal part of our body function. A wide range of foods can

lead to an increase in triglycerides; fructose is not singled out by unbiased

sources. Most foods have calories that will promote body fat when consumed in

too large a quantity and this is particularly true for alcohol.

High triglycerides are the result of a combination of factors, not the direct

result of the consumption of fructose. Clearly the intent was to manipulate a

kernel of fact into a negative charge.

Myth: Industry insiders are currently using less, toxic agave plants due to

shortage of Blue Agave.

Truth: This is a total fabrication. Madhava staff have personally travelled to

Mexico this year and witnessed the SURPLUS of agave plants. This has been well

documented in newspapers in Mexico and the U.S.A. The surplus is so great that

some of the fields in which 8 years were invested, have been let go to seed and

will not be harvested. Toxic plants are certainly not being used or substituted

for agave syrup. It is a wild and crazy suggestion, a cheap shot again designed

to propagandize against agave.

Myth: Agave Nectar is bad for you and should be avoided at all cost!

Truth: Agave Nectar attacks have increased recently; this is at a result of its

popularity.  More and more shoppers are finding Agave Nectar to be an amazing

sugar substitute.  With this the popularity of blogs and pop up articles have

caught on as " Agave " has become a new buzz word such as " Green. " The main source

of the unfounded attacks on Agave are directly linked to one article written and

posted on the web by a " Spiritual Psychologist " with no medical, science, or

industry background.  Furthermore, the authors sole " sweetener†expert has

direct links to artificial sweeteners discrediting both the author’s

creditability and the " experts " motives.  Not only does the " expert " have

direct links to a potential competing sweetener, but has a history of

questionable business practices.  The complete disregard for medical,

scientific, industry facts by the author and industry " expert " is appalling. Not

to mention they should be ashamed for their fear based tactics and questionable

ethics.  We think it should be noted that the author himself has avoided

entirely the controversy he created and has not made himself available to

address questions about the errors of fact, the manipulation of information and

misstatements included in his article, the purpose of which was not to educate,

but an attempt to derail the rising popularity of agave nectar.     

Madhava Honey has recently added to our consulting team, M. Kleiner, PhD,

RD, FACN, CNS, FISSN.   She has written several books on the topic of High

Performance Nutrition and worked with groups such as the Seattle Seahawks,

Seattle Sonics, Miami Heat, Gatorade Sports Nutrition Speakers Network and a

former Educational Advisory Board member of the Gatorade Sports Science

Institute.  She will be consulting with us and providing Madhava consumers with

the facts about Agave Nectar and Fructose in a balanced diet.

Myth: Agave is bad for you because it is high in fructose.

Truth: Higher fructose content does not mean higher fructose consumption.  Most

common sweeteners contain varying amounts of fructose. Fructose is what puts the

sweet into sugar                 sweeteners, glucose is

comparatively not sweet. Some sweeteners are sweeter than others. It is the

higher fructose content that makes them sweeter. Agave has approximately 1.4

times the sweetening power of white sugar.  Because it is sweeter, one adjusts

to taste and consequently uses less, and consumes fewer calories in the

process.  The real issue is overconsumption and making good overall diet

choices.  It is certainly true that overconsumption of any one or a combination

of sugars can have detrimental effects, but this is not in a vacuum, it involves

lifestyles, other food choices and other conditions. Overconsumption of any food

or beverage will have ramifications. Sweeteners are only ingredients which are

added to other foods in relatively small quantity to make them more palatable.

Often times the healthier food choices would not be consumed without this

palatability obtained from the sweetener.  People do not consume sweeteners as

a solitary food in mass quantity. They are just part of the choices people make

and consumption can be controlled, each of us chooses what we eat and how much.

There are no health issues with moderate consumption of sweeteners; every

negative circulating is relative to the overall consumption of one’s diet. 

Moderation in the overall consumption of sweeteners in one’s diet is the

important point.

Sweeteners

There are only 3 categories to choose from when sweetening: sugar sweeteners

from plant sources, artificial sweeteners, and stevia.

Most people will not use artificial sweeteners and many will not use stevia.

This only leaves the sugar sweeteners category, and among these, agave has some

advantages and is a good choice.

All sweeteners in this category also have some similar characteristics and all

add to the overall total consumption that can have an impact on health.

Moderation in the overall consumption of sweeteners in ones diet is the

important point. People may not realize that sugars are essential to our body

and are an important part of one’s diet. The problem being that affinity for

sweets leads to overconsumption. What is overconsumption? It is based on caloric

intake and includes all caloric foods and is also related to the level of

physical activity. The USDA recommends an average diet consumption of 2000

calories. As a portion of this overall consumption, added sweeteners should

constitute approx 10% of that intake, 200-250 calories daily. Agave has 20

calories per teaspoon. The caloric value is similar to other sweeteners, but

less agave is required to reach the same sweetness level, so relatively fewer

calories are consumed per serving.

Posted by The Agave Myth Buster at 1:27 PM

Labels: Agave Nectar, Agave Nectar facts, Madhava, myths

Thursday, April 1, 2010Tequila Plant May Help Fight Bone Loss

Artichokes, garlic and onions also contain beneficial fructans, researchers say

TUESDAY, March 23 (HealthDay News) -- An ingredient in agave -- the plant used

to make tequila -- may help fight bone-weakening osteoporosis and other

diseases, Mexican researchers say.

Agave, artichokes, garlic, onions and chicory are rich, natural sources of

fructans -- nondigestible carbohydrates consisting of molecules of fructose

linked together into chains, according to background information in a news

release from the American Chemical Society.

" Experimental studies suggest that fructans may be beneficial in diabetes,

obesity, stimulating the immune system of the body, decreasing levels of

disease-causing bacteria in the intestine, relieving constipation and reducing

the risk of colon cancer, " Mercedes , of the National Polytechnic Institute

in Guanajuato, said in the news release.

Previous research has also suggested that fructans stimulate the growth of

beneficial bacteria in the large intestine in a way that increases the body's

absorption of minerals, including calcium and magnesium, which are needed for

bone growth.

In this study, and colleagues tested the effects of agave fructans on bone

growth in mice. Compared to other mice, those fed agave fructans absorbed more

calcium from food, excreted less calcium in their feces, and had a 50 percent

increase in levels of a protein associated with the build-up of new bone tissue.

" These results suggest that the supplementation of the standard diet with agave

fructans prevented bone loss and improved bone formation, indicating the

important role of agave fructans on the maintenance of healthy bone, "

said. " They can be used in many products for children and infants to help

prevent various diseases, and can even be used in ice cream as a sugar

substitute. "

But drinking tequila won't help, the study authors noted. The fructans turn into

alcohol when agave is processed into tequila, they said.

The study was to be presented Tuesday at the national meeting of the American

Chemical Society in San Francisco.

More information

The National Osteoporosis Foundation has more about osteoporosis prevention.

-- Preidt

SOURCE: American Chemical Society, news release, March 23, 2010

Last Updated: March 23, 2010

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Posted by The Agave Myth Buster at 4:08 PM

Speak with Him Thou for He hearest.

Spirit with Spirit can speak.

Closer is Love than breathing,

Nearer than hands and feet.

(with appreciation for Tennyson)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...