Sweet or savoury? What kind of tastes do you like? If like me, you have a sweet tooth, you probably can't resist eating cakes, biscuits or chocolate and will sweeten your tea or coffee with spoonfuls of sugar – delicious! But the taste makes it very easy to ignore the warnings that too much of the white stuff is bad for our health.
Consuming sugar is an addiction – the more we eat, the more we want. Today's processed food, like ready meals, is laced with the stuff and many fizzy drinks contain seven teaspoons of sugar in just one can. In the UK, statistics show that sugar consumption is at its highest level in history and the government is trying to get the food industry to cut the amount of sugar in popular products like chocolate bars by 20% by 2020.
Of course, sugary food tastes nice, it can help lift our mood, and the glucose in it can give us an energy boost. But there are dangers too: a high-sugar diet is linked to obesity, and being overweight can increase the risk of getting type 2 diabetes. With these warning signs, I have considered changing my diet by replacing sugary snacks with fruit and savoury biscuits – but that's boring, I need my sugar fix!
I'm not alone. BBC journalist Radhika Shanghani, has gone one step further. Encouraged by some celebrities and nutritionists promoting a 'zero tolerance' approach to sugar, she gave it up altogether, thinking it would make her healthier. Initially she says, "My first fortnight involves mood swings worse than puberty. I have agonising headaches and feel permanently hungover." These symptoms disappeared but she still found food shopping hard as she was stressing about buying the right things.
Her experiment wasn't a success. She eventually sought advice from Susan Jebb, professor of diet and population health at Oxford University who said: “Lots of people enjoy sugar and gain pleasure from it, so one has to find a balance between enjoyment and eating the right amount."
There are health benefits of cutting down sugar such as improving dental care and reducing weight gain, but there's no need to be obsessive about it. Eating some sugar as part of a balanced diet is fine and exercising will help burn it off. So rather than dealing with your sugar cravings by cutting it out of your diet altogether, why not work on your willpower and learn to say 'no' to a second serving of chocolate fudge cheesecake.
1. What target has the UK government set the food industry to achieve by 2020?
2. Why did BBC journalist Radhika Shanghani give up sugar altogether?
3. True or false? Susan Jebb, professor of diet and population health at Oxford University, says we should consume no more than seven teaspoons of sugar a day.
4. What could help you burn off the sugar you consume?
5. Which word used in the article means to get advantages from something?
2. 请在不参考课文的情况下完成下列练习。选择一个意思合适的单词填入句子的空格处。
1. I'm feeling sleepy, probably because I haven't had my caffeine ______ today.
addiction laced fix cravings
2. The doctor says my ______ are not serious and I probably just have a cold.
mood swings symptoms sweet tooth willpower
3. Brushing our teeth in the morning and at night, before bed, is all part of good ______.
dentist care dentals care sweet teeth dental care
4. My mum told me that when you go to university, you need to find a ______ between working hard and having fun.
balance zero tolerance hangover fix
5. I don't have much of a ______. I would rather eat crisps and other savoury things.
1. What target has the UK government set the food industry to achieve by 2020?
The government is trying to get the food industry to cut the amount of sugar in popular products like chocolate bars by 20% by 2020.
2. Why did BBC journalist Radhika Shanghani give up sugar altogether?
To be more healthy.
3. True or false? Susan Jebb, professor of diet and population health at Oxford University, says we should consume no more than seven teaspoons of sugar a day.
False. She actually says "one has to find a balance between enjoyment and eating the right amount."
4. What could help you burn off the sugar you consume?
Doing exercise.
5. Which word used in the article means to get advantages from something?
Benefits (health benefits)
2. 请在不参考课文的情况下完成下列练习。选择一个意思合适的单词填入句子的空格处。
1. I'm feeling sleepy, probably because I haven't had my caffeine fix today.
2. The doctor says my symptoms are not serious and I probably just have a cold.
3. Brushing our teeth in the morning and at night, before bed, is all part of good dental care.
4. My mum told me that when you go to university, you need to find a balance between working hard and having fun.
5. I don't have much of a sweet tooth. I would rather eat crisps and other savoury things.