On food labels in Australia and New Zealand, nutrition figures are presented in a standard table format called the Nutrition Information Panel or NIP. This important panel shows the quantities per serve and per 100 g of the food or per 100 mL if liquid. If you can understand the numbers on it, I find it's an invaluable aid to assessing any food.
Let's take a look at a hypothetical bottle of French salad dressing (oil and vinegar) that you'd buy at a supermarket. Turn to the back and you'll spot the standard nutrition information panel that is required on almost all food products. I've re-created a typical one here:
Per serve 20 mL tbsp |
Per 100 mL
|
|
Energy | 430 kJ 103 Cal |
2140 kJ 510 Cal |
Protein | 0.1 g | 0.3 g |
Fat, total - Saturated |
11 g 2 g |
55 g 10 g |
Carbohydrate, total - Sugars |
0.1 g 0.1 g |
1 g 1 g |
Dietary fibre | 0 g | 0 g |
Sodium | 40 mg | 200 mg |
The PER SERVE column is handy for seeing how much fat, fibre, sodium or kilojoules/Calories IN ONE SERVE of this salad dressing which may influence how much you want to eat of it.
Start at the top and run your eye down this Per serve column. Here's how I interpret the numbers:
Serve size: All these figures relate to one tablespoon or 20 ml of the dressing. See my comments below on realistic serve sizes.
Kilojoules: One 20 mL tablespoon of the dressing gives you 430 kilojoules, which is equivalent to 103 Calories. About the same as from a thick slice of bread.
Protein: At 0.1 gram per tablespoon, there's virtually no protein.
Fat: One tablespoon adds a large 11 grams of fat to your daily tally. If you're on a low-fat diet (maximum 40 or 50 grams a day), then 11 grams is one-fifth of your day's intake! You may want to use only a teaspoon or swap to a fat-free dressing. This 11 grams is equivalent to the fat from half a tablespoon of oil (10 g).
Saturated fat: The good news is you only get 2 grams of saturated fat, the ‘bad' fat for cholesterol.
Carbohydrate and sugars: 0.1g. Like most dressings, there's almost no carbohydrate or sugars.
Fibre: There's no fibre.
Sodium: And there's only small amount of salt (40 mg sodium), which is not always true for this category.
The PER 100 grams column helps you to compare different products on a weight-for-weight basis.
Remember that the figures in the Per 100 g column are percentages. So the 55 grams of fat you see listed means it's got 55 per cent or 55% fat.
Start at the top and run your eye down this column. Here's how to interpret the numbers:
Kilojoules: 100 mLs of the dressing gives you 2140 kilojoules, which is equivalent to 510 Calories.
Protein: At 0.3 per cent, there's hardly any protein.
Fat: Over half of this dressing is made up of fat (55% or 55 per cent) which is around what you'd expect from an oil-vinegar mix. Some dressings can be as high as 80 per cent fat while fat-free dressing have 0 per cent.
Saturated fat: Of the total fat of 55, only 10 grams is made up of the 'bad' saturated fat. This translates to 18 per cent which is low (ideal is anything less than 30 per cent).
Carbohydrate and sugars: Like most dressings, there's little carbohydrate at 1 per cent. All the carbohydrate is present as sugars (also 1 per cent) which would come from a little added cane sugar for flavour. You can check this against the List of Ingredients.
Fibre: Zero fibre as you'd expect from a dressing.
Sodium: Sodium or salt is low at 200 mg sodium. Average sodium for dressings is 700 to 900 mg per 100 mL. Low-sodium dressings must have less than 120 mg per 100 g or 100 mL.
Note: as these figures in Per 100 mL column are percentages, they should total 100 per cent. But you have to add in the water component which is never given on the NIP - but is analysed for. So here the sum of protein 0.3 + fat 55 + carbohydrate 1+ fibre 0 = 56.3 per cent.
Allowing for water at around 40 per cent (really anywhere from 35 to 50, as I don’t know the formulation) which brings the total to 96.3 which is near 100 per cent.
Remember that the serving size is suggested by the manufacturer. There is no official list of how big a serve of dressing or cereal or custard has to be, although that would be a great help if there were so that serves could be standardized across brands.
The manufacturer decides how big or small their serve is and it can vary significantly between brands. For instance, some brands of breakfast cereal set 30 grams as a single serve, whilst others list 40 g or 45 g.
See the two bowls in the picture. You need to measure out or weigh the portion suggested and see if it's realistic. Ask yourself - would I eat this much of this food?
A NIP is required by law on all foods except for a small list which are exempt which includes: