Ask the Harvard Experts: Scouting Out Whole Grains in Food

Q: What makes whole grain foods healthier than other carbs? And how can you tell which products are really whole grain?

A: Whole grains reduce the risk of heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes. But they do even more. People who eat a diet rich in whole grain foods live longer compared to people who consume foods made from refined grains.

All grains grow as kernels. Each kernel has three layers:

  • The inner germ contains many of the vitamins, minerals and healthy oils.
  • The middle layer is called the endosperm. It is primarily starch and makes up most of the kernel. It provides the energy the kernel needs to start growing.
  • The outer coating, known as bran, contains most of the grain’s fiber.

In the 1880s, millers became very adept at separating the layers, especially for wheat. The starchy middle layer was ideal for baking. These new refined grains became very popular. White bread crowded grocery store shelves for the next 100 years. Goodbye to the germ and bran, along with their nutritional value.

When you eat a whole grain, you’re getting more than just the fiber from the outer layer. You also get all the vitamins, minerals, good fats, protein, antioxidants and other healthful parts of the grain’s inner layer.

It’s easy enough to decide between brown rice and white rice. But selecting whole-grain breads and cereals often requires a close reading of the food label.

Don’t be fooled by terms such as “wheat flour,” “unbleached wheat flour” and “enriched wheat flour.” They can refer to refined white flour. The same goes for “stone-ground,” “multigrain,” “fortified,” “stoned wheat,” “cracked wheat” and “organic.” None of these terms guarantees that the product is whole grain.

To be sure that you are really getting whole grains, look for the word “whole” or “whole-grain” before the grain’s name as the first ingredient.

And it’s not enough that “made with whole grain” appears somewhere on the list of ingredients. That grain may have been refined. Again, the key is the word “whole” in the first ingredient listed — for example, “stone-ground whole wheat.”

(Howard LeWine, MD, is a practicing internist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and Chief Medical Editor at Harvard Health Publishing, Harvard Medical School. For additional consumer health information, please visit www.health.harvard.edu.)
(c) 2020 PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE CONTENT AGENCY, LLC.
Food
Nutrition
Whole Grain
Previous
Next

Get the Latest Health News Directly in Your Inbox