Kraft American Cheese Singles Have Been Labeled A Health Food By Professional Nutritionists (Not As A Joke)

Kraft Singles Are Not Actually Cheese, But They're Apparently A Health Food Now
**FILE** Packages of Kraft Singles are seen in this July 24, 2006 file photo, in Chicago. Kraft Foods Inc., the nation's largest food and beverage maker, reported a second-quarter profit rise of nearly 4 percent on Monday, July 28, 2008, saying higher prices helped offset rising commodity costs. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, file)
**FILE** Packages of Kraft Singles are seen in this July 24, 2006 file photo, in Chicago. Kraft Foods Inc., the nation's largest food and beverage maker, reported a second-quarter profit rise of nearly 4 percent on Monday, July 28, 2008, saying higher prices helped offset rising commodity costs. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, file)

Kraft Singles, a type of processed cheese that comes individually wrapped in a thin, plastic film, is the first food to receive the new "Kids Eat Right" label -- a stamp of approval designed by the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics to help families make healthier decisions in the grocery store.

The "Kids Eat Right" campaign is meant to "raise awareness that the diets of America's kids are lacking in three important components– dairy, calcium and vitamin D," according to a statement from AND. But the news has been met with skepticism, if not outright derision.

At Mother Jones, food and agriculture correspondent Tom Philpott cites a 2013 report from food industry lawyer and researcher Michele Simon, "which documented the strong and ever-growing financial ties between the Academy and big food companies, including Kraft."

Marion Nestle, Ph.d, M.P.H., a professor in the department of nutrition, food studies and public health at NYU, shared the news on her site Food Politics, with a parenthetical -- "you can't make this stuff up."

"Kraft is well known as a sponsor of AND," Nestle wrote. "Such seals are usually money-raising gimmicks. I’m wondering if 'proud supporter of' means that Kraft pays AND for use of this seal. If so, I’d like to know what the seal costs."

Commenting on the Dietitians for Professional Integrity's Facebook page, Allison Duffek Bradfield, a registered dietitian at the Duke Raleigh Hospital writes, "I'm absolutely disgusted with the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. They have put the health of our children in jeopardy for money. I am embarrassed to be a part of this organization which clearly has lost its priorities."

By the FDA's standards, Kraft isn't permitted to refer to Singles as "cheese" because this word indicates that a product is made with at least 51 percent real cheese. This is why the label reads "pasteurized prepared cheese product."

Typically, the fewer ingredients a food contains, the healthier that food tends to be. Think of some favorite health foods: avocados, for example, or kale or almonds. These foods aren't just popular -- they boast the kind of short ingredient lists that can only come from a whole food: avocado is made of avocado. That's it.

Comparatively, the ingredient list for a slice of Kraft American Cheese reads like a novel:

  • Cheddar cheese (milk, cheese culture, salt, enzymes)
  • Whey
  • Water
  • Protein concentrate
  • Milk
  • Sodium citrate
  • Calcium phosphate
  • Milkfat
  • Gelatin
  • Salt
  • Sodium phosphate
  • Lactic acid as a preservative
  • Annatto and paprika extract (color)
  • Enzymes
  • Vitamin A palmitate
  • Cheese culture
  • Vitamin D3

For now, the AND continues to defend its election and claim that no fishy deals were executed. The organization insists that "it does not constitute any endorsement or nutritional seal of approval by the Academy, its Foundation or Kids Eat Right. The Academy Foundation does not endorse any products, brands or services."

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