ctbirds@lists.ctbirding.org

For discussing birds and birding in Connecticut

View all threads

Re: [CT Birds] Grape Jelly High Fructose Corn Syrup

W
wingsct@juno.com
Thu, Apr 3, 2008 11:27 PM

Shari,
You can get organic grape jelly which is sweet enough on its own, or there
are some brands that use fruit juice as a sweetener.  Available in the natural
foods section of most supermarkets or at a natural foods store such as
Whole Foods.

Meredith Sampson
Old Greenwich

-- Shari kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net wrote:
I have put grape jelly out for the orioles, too.  I am wondering if we should because it all seems to have high fructose corn syrup.  According to nutritionists, this is a chemical, not a food and is metabolized in strange ways.  Any thoughts? I suppose we could sweeten some grape juice with cane sugar as a substitute.
Shari Guarino, Southington


This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut.
For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org


It's never too old to date. Senior Dating. Click Here.
http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2121/fc/REAK6aAZLiIu1XiuG3dqrq4y8yMpWbgFSC5tw2EcCWBfYfK4JOyc7P/

Shari, You can get organic grape jelly which is sweet enough on its own, or there are some brands that use fruit juice as a sweetener. Available in the natural foods section of most supermarkets or at a natural foods store such as Whole Foods. Meredith Sampson Old Greenwich -- Shari <kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net> wrote: I have put grape jelly out for the orioles, too. I am wondering if we should because it all seems to have high fructose corn syrup. According to nutritionists, this is a chemical, not a food and is metabolized in strange ways. Any thoughts? I suppose we could sweeten some grape juice with cane sugar as a substitute. Shari Guarino, Southington _______________________________________________ This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut. For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org _____________________________________________________________ It's never too old to date. Senior Dating. Click Here. http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2121/fc/REAK6aAZLiIu1XiuG3dqrq4y8yMpWbgFSC5tw2EcCWBfYfK4JOyc7P/
CR
Craig Repasz
Fri, Apr 4, 2008 5:03 PM

Fructose is fructose whether it comes from corn or if it gomes from fruit. The corn starches need to be treated with an enzyme manufactured from bacteria in order to produce the fructose. Fructose is a natural product produced by plants. Fructose like all sugars get metabolized into glucose then used by the body. One can argue that all sugars are chemicals.

Studies have shown that diets high in high fructose corn syrup can lead to obesity and other problems. As mentioned there are other products available many sweetened with fruit juice concentrates. However, it is still a high concentration of fructose.

I wonder if unnaturally high sugar concentrations, fructose, sucrose etc. can have an adverse effect on birds. Or will they be better off if just put fruit out? Craig

From: wingsct@juno.com> Date: Thu, 3 Apr 2008 23:27:20 +0000> To: kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net> CC: ctbirds@lists.ctbirding.org> Subject: Re: [CT Birds] Grape Jelly High Fructose Corn Syrup> > Shari,> You can get organic grape jelly which is sweet enough on its own, or there> are some brands that use fruit juice as a sweetener. Available in the natural> foods section of most supermarkets or at a natural foods store such as> Whole Foods.> > Meredith Sampson> Old Greenwich> > > -- Shari kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net wrote:> I have put grape jelly out for the orioles, too. I am wondering if we should because it all seems to have high fructose corn syrup. According to nutritionists, this is a chemical, not a food and is metabolized in strange ways. Any thoughts? I suppose we could sweeten some grape juice with cane sugar as a substitute.> Shari Guarino, Southington> _______________________________________________> This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut. > For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org> > _____________________________________________________________> It's never too old to date. Senior Dating. Click Here.> http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2121/fc/REAK6aAZLiIu1XiuG3dqrq4y8yMpWbgFSC5tw2EcCWBfYfK4JOyc7P/> _______________________________________________> This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut. > For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org


Use video conversation to talk face-to-face with Windows Live Messenger.
http://www.windowslive.com/messenger/connect_your_way.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_Refresh_messenger_video_042008

Fructose is fructose whether it comes from corn or if it gomes from fruit. The corn starches need to be treated with an enzyme manufactured from bacteria in order to produce the fructose. Fructose is a natural product produced by plants. Fructose like all sugars get metabolized into glucose then used by the body. One can argue that all sugars are chemicals. Studies have shown that diets high in high fructose corn syrup can lead to obesity and other problems. As mentioned there are other products available many sweetened with fruit juice concentrates. However, it is still a high concentration of fructose. I wonder if unnaturally high sugar concentrations, fructose, sucrose etc. can have an adverse effect on birds. Or will they be better off if just put fruit out? Craig > From: wingsct@juno.com> Date: Thu, 3 Apr 2008 23:27:20 +0000> To: kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net> CC: ctbirds@lists.ctbirding.org> Subject: Re: [CT Birds] Grape Jelly High Fructose Corn Syrup> > Shari,> You can get organic grape jelly which is sweet enough on its own, or there> are some brands that use fruit juice as a sweetener. Available in the natural> foods section of most supermarkets or at a natural foods store such as> Whole Foods.> > Meredith Sampson> Old Greenwich> > > -- Shari <kestrel9222@sbcglobal.net> wrote:> I have put grape jelly out for the orioles, too. I am wondering if we should because it all seems to have high fructose corn syrup. According to nutritionists, this is a chemical, not a food and is metabolized in strange ways. Any thoughts? I suppose we could sweeten some grape juice with cane sugar as a substitute.> Shari Guarino, Southington> _______________________________________________> This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut. > For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org> > _____________________________________________________________> It's never too old to date. Senior Dating. Click Here.> http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2121/fc/REAK6aAZLiIu1XiuG3dqrq4y8yMpWbgFSC5tw2EcCWBfYfK4JOyc7P/> _______________________________________________> This list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for the discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut. > For subscription information visit http://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org _________________________________________________________________ Use video conversation to talk face-to-face with Windows Live Messenger. http://www.windowslive.com/messenger/connect_your_way.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_Refresh_messenger_video_042008