Where Has All the Low Carb Food Gone?


While diets like Atkins or Zone or South Beach are labeled as “fad diets” by many people, truth be told, many people enjoy great success at not only losing weight by following carbohydrate restricted diets, but vast empirical evidence suggests that going low carb can lead to better overall health. However, Canadians looking to live the low carb lifestyle are faced with a dilemma.

This weekend is my wife’s birthday. We’re having some family over for dinner to celebrate and I thought I’d take the opportunity to bake a big batch of low carb savory macaroni and cheese. The catch, of course, was that the recipe called for low carb elbow macaroni and bread crumbs. Easy enough, I thought. But after scowering half a dozen grocery stores, I was empty handed.

Faced with this problem, I looked to the Internet (as always). It turns out that I wasn’t the only one looking for some low carb pasta to no avail. Dreamfields seems to be the popular low carb pasta brand in the US, but while once sold in Canada, it is no more. Turns out that you’d be hard pressed to find any low carb products in Canadian grocery stores.

In 2003, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency made amendments to the Food and Drug Regulations, setting requirements for nutritional content and diet related health claims on food labels. Specifically, restrictions were put in place on labeling products as low carb or variants thereof. Just as grocery store shelves began getting stocked full of low carb food items, companies began pulling the items out of the Canadian market. The obvious reason - if you can’t advertise the benefits of one food item over another, then why bother even making it available in the first place.

So what are we to do? Fortunately there are options. The Low Carb Grocery, based in Toronto, has a fairly inexpensive mail order operation going on. And they have it all, including Dreamfields pasta. But if you’re looking to cook something soon and don’t have the luxury of being able to wait for your food to show up in the mailbox, you’re forced to really look hard to find something that will meet your low carb needs.

I finally settled on Catelli’s Smart elbow pasta which is a white pasta that supposedly tastes unlike the whole wheat kind but has all the fibre benefits making it the lowest net-carb white pasta that I could find. I also found a loaf of Dempster’s whole wheat bread that contains only 7 grams of carbs per slice. In fact, Dempsters was daring enough to advertise this on their packaging despite the regulations (in 2008, further amendments were made to the legislation such that companies are now allowed to advertise the carb content on food labels, so long as there are no other words involved).

But here is the crazy thing about all these low carb label restrictions. They exist, apparently, because of the lack of scientific evidence that low carb is a healthy lifestyle. Fine - despite the fact that I (and many, many others) think opposite, a fair argument can be made of that. But what about the thousands of labeled low fat or prebiotic items for sale? Not only does scientific evidence fail to find these things healthy, empirical evidence is turning up suggesting that low fat diets are actually bad for your health. So why isn’t labelling things as low fat equally restricted??

At the end of the day, it seems that government bodies sometimes feel it necessary to restrict society from making mistakes. Unfortunately they’re just like you and me and many times not only do their priorities get screwed up, they just get things plain wrong. However, with the low carb thing, enough empirical evidence does exist today that I think some further amendments should be made to the legislation to allow a reasonable use labeling to suggest low carb so that companies can begin selling their low carb items in Canada again outside of the rare specialty shops.





3 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. Dean J

    The research doesn’t seem to support all carbs being bad, except for morbidly obese folks trying to lose weight quickly. It seems to say, from what my uneducated eyes have seen, that simple sugars aren’t so hot for us. Foods that break down quickly and provide an energy rush spike our insulin levels, cause us to store that energy as fat, and cause a host of other health problems. High fructose corn syrup is the devil, but it has a legion of things right behind it…

    March 20th, 2008

  2. Jamie

    Thanks for the comment Dean! You’re right - the main problem with sugars is that they cause an insulin response and as a result trigger fat storage and other health related issues. The goal of any healthy diet, then, should be to keep insulin in check. Avoiding high fructose syrups or other simple sugars is definitely a step in the right direction. However, processed grains (minute rice or white bread for example) also cause insulin spikes. In fact, most grains will cause some sort of insulin response. This is why some diabetics have problems with pasta.

    March 20th, 2008

  3. cmj

    you can still find high fiber pastas pretty easily.

    great post!

    April 6th, 2008

Reply to “Where Has All the Low Carb Food Gone?”

Blog Traffic Exchange Related Websites
  • blog traffic exchangeTwo Great Foods You Probably Aren't Eating I've fallen in love with a couple of new foods. Fortunately, one them isn't pie. Unfortunately, the other one is. Sorry, that was a poor attempt at humor. Neither of the foods are pie. However while we are on the subject, I hope you had a great National Pie Day......
  • Refueling Before Skiing AgainEating for Skiing: Finding the Best Foods For Your Day-Long Skiing Adventures /caption] When it's cold outside, and you're tackling hill after hill, swooshing and skilifting your way up and down the slopes, it can be easy to forget about some of your basic bodily functions. No, I'm not talking about the bathroom - I'm talking about your need for energy and......
  • Fat Loss Secrets Revealed It's that time of year again. It's freezin' outside in upstate NY, the snow is falling, and a good year ends while another year, full of possibilities, begins. It is also the time of year where most of us scramble to undo all the holiday damage we did to......
  • blog traffic exchangePost Workout Nutrition While many people focus on what to eat before you start exercising, I believe it is what you eat afterwards that really matters. Whether you are trying to avoid dehydration, or you find that you are really wiped out after exercising, it is important to make sure that your post......
  • happyWhat is a Calorie? The definition of one calorie, officially, is defined as the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of one liter of water one degree. Thus, a calorie is actually not a tangible item, but rather a unit of measure. Calories actually measure the energy contained in a given food......

Blog Traffic Exchange Related Posts
  • blog traffic exchangeMore Evidence Suggesting Aspartame Safe It goes without saying that diet colas are an extremely popular drink. These days, diet anything is popular. Despite their popularity, most people will agree that there is much confusion about artificial sweeteners, specifically aspartame, and whether or not there are any side effects from continued consumption. The confusion no......
  • blog traffic exchangeInterview with Gary Taubes on Good Calorie, Bad Calories Last year, CBC Radio show Quirks and Quarks interviewed Gary Taubes, the controversial scientific writer and author of Good Calories, Bad Calories: Challenging the Conventional Wisdom on Diet, Weight Control and Disease. Here is said interview: Taubes discusses the hypothesis of how the unjustified adoptation of low fat dieting throughout......
  • Top Sources for Yer Omega-3 There has been no end to the number of articles being published over the last little while regarding the benefits of Omega-3 fatty acids. From the heart to the brain, Omega-3 seems as essential to the protection and maintenance of our important organs as other important vitamins and minerals. And......
  • blog traffic exchangeSix Pack Exercises The road to a 6 pack of abs is a tough one. It's a combination of diet, exercise and genetics that make or break one of the most sought after defined muscle groups. In fact, for some people, it's just impossible. But it's worth a shot and although the golden......
  • blog traffic exchangeFat Head Documentary - Debunking the Low-Fat Diet We saw Spurlock's "Super Size Me" taking on the fast food industry by having the him gorge himself on McDonald's at least 3 times per day, claiming that if he kept going at his pace, the high fat content would surely kill him. For years, the public has been made......