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How is Olestra made?


 

 


It is made start a vegetable oil, like soybean or cottonseed, and ordinary table sugar. The oils undergo a process that reduces
their caloric value while retaining the creamy "mouth-feel" of fat. Olean is the first fat-based cooking oil that can be used like fat, 
including for frying. This means that, for the first time, salty snack foods fried in Olean taste like their full-fat counterparts but
have substantially fewer calories and little or no fat. Unlike the oil in regular fried foods, Olean has no calories because its structure 
prevents digestive enzymes from breaking it down. That means neither the fat nor the sugar are absorbed by the body.   

On January 24, 1996, the FDA approved olestra for use in savory snacks such as chips, crackers, and tortilla chips. Despite being
approved as safe by the FDA, all snacks containing olestra must carry a label that states: Olestra was developed by Procter and
Gamble as an artificial fat substitute that could be used in diet snacks such as potato chips. The substance, which is a sucrose polyester,
has the same taste and cooking properties as regular fat, but is designed so that due to its molecular size, it cannot be absorbed into the bloodstream and passes right through the digestive tract. One adverse consequence is abdominal cramping and diarrhea.


Another problem is that Olestra absorbs the lipid-soluble vitamins and nutrients in food and takes them right along with it. This can
cause the loss of vitamins A, D, E and K, along with substances called caretenoids, which have been linked to cancer and blindness
prevention. Although Procter and Gamble will supplement the product with vitamins, there are problems deciding which vitamins to
add and how much is necessary. All products containing Olestra must list the following warning:

"This Product Contains Olestra. Olestra may cause abdominal cramping and loose stools. Olestra inhibits the absorption
  of some vitamins and other nutrients. Vitamins A, D, E, and K have been added."


Olestra tastes like real fat, but slips through the body without adding fat and calories. Critics' concerns include side effects such as
depletion of cancer-fighting nutrients and gastrointestinal disturbances such as bloating and diarrhea.

Olestra can be found in the following products:
Frito Lays  - WOW brand of  Chips
Fat Free Pringles
Nabisco Fat Free Ritz Crackers
Nabisco Fat Free Wheat Thins


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