Ferruzzi Mario G, Jonnalagadda Satya S, Liu Simin, Marquart Len, McKeown Nicola, Reicks Marla, Riccardi Gabriele, Seal Chris, Slavin Joanne, Thielecke Frank, van der Kamp Jan-Willem, Webb Densie
Department of Food Science, and.
Adv Nutr. 2014 Mar 1;5(2):164-76. doi: 10.3945/an.113.005223.
Although the term "whole grain" is well defined, there has been no universal standard of what constitutes a "whole-grain food," creating challenges for researchers, the food industry, regulatory authorities, and consumers around the world. As part of the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the U.S. Dietary Guidelines Technical Advisory Committee issued a call to action to develop definitions for whole-grain foods that could be universally accepted and applied to dietary recommendations and planning. The Committee's call to action, and the lack of a global whole-grain food definition, was the impetus for the Whole Grain Roundtable held 3-5 December 2012 in Chicago, Illinois. The objective was to develop a whole-grain food definition that is consistent with the quartet of needs of science, food product formulation, consumer behavior, and label education. The roundtable's expert panel represented a broad range of expertise from the United States and Europe, including epidemiology and dietary intervention researchers, consumer educators, government policy makers, and food and nutrition scientists from academia and the grain food industry. Taking into account the totality, quality, and consistency of available scientific evidence, the expert panel recommended that 8 g of whole grain/30 g serving (27 g/100 g), without a fiber requirement, be considered a minimum content of whole grains that is nutritionally meaningful and that a food providing at least 8 g of whole grains/30-g serving be defined as a whole-grain food. Having an established whole-grain food definition will encourage manufacturers to produce foods with meaningful amounts of whole grain, allow consistent product labeling and messaging, and empower consumers to readily identify whole-grain foods and achieve whole-grain dietary recommendations.
尽管“全谷物”一词已有明确的定义,但对于什么构成“全谷物食品”,却没有通用的标准,这给世界各地的研究人员、食品行业、监管机构和消费者都带来了挑战。作为《2010年美国膳食指南》的一部分,美国膳食指南技术咨询委员会发出行动呼吁,要制定出能被普遍接受并应用于膳食建议和规划的全谷物食品定义。该委员会的行动呼吁以及全球缺乏全谷物食品定义,成为了2012年12月3日至5日在伊利诺伊州芝加哥举行的全谷物圆桌会议的推动力。其目标是制定一个与科学、食品产品配方、消费者行为和标签教育这四重需求相一致的全谷物食品定义。圆桌会议的专家小组代表了来自美国和欧洲的广泛专业知识领域,包括流行病学和膳食干预研究人员、消费者教育工作者、政府政策制定者以及来自学术界和谷物食品行业的食品与营养科学家。考虑到现有科学证据的完整性、质量和一致性,专家小组建议将每份30克食品中含有8克全谷物(每100克含27克)、且无纤维要求,视为具有营养意义的全谷物最低含量,并且将每份提供至少8克全谷物的食品定义为全谷物食品。确立全谷物食品定义将鼓励制造商生产含有适量全谷物的食品,实现一致的产品标签和信息传达,并使消费者能够轻松识别全谷物食品,达到全谷物膳食建议。