NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Kids who start the day with a bowl of sugary cereal are consuming almost twice the sugar they would take in eating healthier options -- which, incidentally, they would be ...
Your £6 muesli might not be as healthy as it looks: new research shows some premium brands fail the government’s nutrient profiling model, while cheaper versions score higher. Hannah Twiggs explores h ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Prime members can order a box of this cereal from Whole Foods Market online. Not a Prime member? You can still try it, but you'll ...
There are few foods as reliable and satisfying as a classic bowl of cereal. But far too often, that comfort comes packed with added sugars and ultra-processed ingredients that make breakfast feel more ...
Your breakfast choices can have a real impact on your blood pressure. Too much sodium, sugar and saturated fat can raise it, while nutrients like fiber and potassium help keep it in check.
Not all mueslis are created equal, and some brands are packed with sugar and saturated fats, so they're not all that healthy.
Adult women should aim to consume 25 grams or less of added sugar daily, and men should have 36 grams or less. Granola often provides more added sugar per serving than whole-grain breakfast cereals.
Could this be the end of cereal aisle showdowns between parents and sweet-toothed tots? New reduced-sugar versions of popular children's breakfast cereals -- everything from Froot Loops to Frosted ...
Last year, I wrote about a study that showed cereal companies market the cereals with the sugariest nutritional profiles to kids, essentially encouraging children to choose Froot Loops over, say, ...
The kids studied liked low-sugar options, and even though they added more sugar, their breakfasts weren't nearly as sweet as kids who ate sugary cereals. The results appear online Monday in Pediatrics ...