The present invention relates generally to food products and nutrition. More particularly, the invention relates to methods for providing readily recognizable nutritional information to consumers.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has previously established standards for labeling of food products, including beverages and snacks, as “Healthy”. For example, the criteria for healthy include less than 3 mg of fat, less than 1 mg of saturated fat, no more than 60 mg of cholesterol, no more than 480 mg of sodium. In addition, if the food product is identified as having reduced sugar, the sugar content must be no greater than 25%. The healthy food products also contain 10% or more of the recommended daily requirements of vitamins A and C, iron, fiber and protein. However, the FDA standards do not have any criteria or limits for trans fats or for added sugar.
The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) has issued dietary recommendations, which include no more that 20-35% of kcal for fats, low saturated fats, low trans fats and up to 25% of kcal for added sugar.
As noted above, the FDA and NAS standards provide some guidelines for food products and diets, but neither standard provides a comprehensive set of limits for food product contents, especially those food product contents that are known to be potentially detrimental to health. It is therefore difficult for consumers to know whether, or to understand to what extent, they ought to rely upon a claim that a food product supports a healthy lifestyle.
It has come to be appreciated by the present inventors that advantages can be realized by standards for food products that are healthy, are of reduced sugar or calorie content or that deliver a functional benefit. It also has come to be realized that further advantages could be gained by providing a marking, such as a with a logo, that will be readily recognizable by consumers to represent or to certify that the identified food product satisfies a comprehensive list of limitations for food ingredients known to be detrimental to health and for supplementation of food ingredients known to provide a biologically efficacious effect.
Accordingly, it is a general aspect or object of the present invention to provide indicia on the packaging of a food product that will alert the consumer that the food product of interest satisfies certain nutritional criteria.
Yet another aspect or object of the present invention is to provide indicia on the packaging of food products that indicate that the food product has been fortified with healthy ingredients, such as vitamins, iron, fiber and/or protein.
The present invention is directed to a method for providing consumers with nutritional value information, including the steps of developing threshold criteria for nutritional value information, the threshold criteria including a maximum fat level, a maximum saturated fat level, a maximum trans-fat level, a maximum cholesterol level, a maximum sodium level, and a maximum percentage of calories from sugars, selecting food products exhibiting all of the threshold criteria, the food products being selected from among products of a company, applying a distinctive logo to the food products that exhibit the threshold criteria to provide a plurality of nutritional value food products; and distributing the nutritional value food products for display in retail store outlets with the distinctive logo being visible to retail consumers.
The food products may be selected from the group consisting of beverages, solid foods and snack foods and the selection process may be automated. The step of developing threshold criteria may include the step of developing a maximum fat level criteria selected from the group consisting of (a) containing about 3 grams of fat or less and (b) having not more than about 35 percent of its calories from fat, based upon the total calories provided by the food product. The step of developing threshold criteria may use a maximum saturated fat level of less than about 1 gram or less of saturated fat, a maximum trans-fat level of zero, a maximum cholesterol level of 60 milligrams or less of cholesterol, a maximum sodium level of 480 milligrams or less of sodium, and a maximum percentage of calories from sugar of not more than about 25 percent of the calories of the food product being from sugar, based upon the total calories provided by the food product. The step of developing threshold criteria may also include recognizing vitamins, minerals, fiber, protein, or combinations thereof.
The present invention also includes another method for providing consumers with nutritional value information, including the steps of developing threshold criteria for nutritional value information for food products, the threshold criteria being that the food product includes a nutritional ingredient selected from the group consisting of fortified ingredients and ingredients naturally present in the food product, the nutritional ingredient being efficacious in delivering a biologically functional benefit when ingested, selecting food products exhibiting the threshold criteria, the food products being selected from among products of a company, applying a distinctive logo to the food products that exhibit the threshold criteria to provide a plurality of nutritional value food products, and distributing the nutritional value food products for displaying same in retail store outlets with the distinctive logo being visible to retail consumers. The food products may generally include beverages, solid foods and snack foods.
Another method of the present invention provides consumers with nutritional value information by developing threshold criteria for nutritional value information, the threshold criteria being a minimum reduction in a nutritionally negative component selected from the group consisting of fat level, sugar level, sodium level, total calorie level, and combinations thereof, each minimum level being reduced when compared with a base product which is formulated with a traditional level of the nutritionally negative component, selecting food products exhibiting at least one of the threshold criteria, the food products being selected from among products of a company, applying a distinctive logo to the food products that exhibit the threshold criteria to provide a plurality of nutritional value food products, and distributing the nutritional value food products for display in retail store outlets with the distinctive logo being visible to retail consumers.
The features of the present invention which are believed to be novel are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention, together with the further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in the figures in which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:
A first method of developing threshold criteria for nutritional value of one or more food products in accordance with the present invention is shown in
At block 22 in
A second criterion associated with the first method may include a definition of the maximum saturated fat level of the food product, such as about one gram or less, as indicated in block 24 of
As further illustrated in
The threshold criteria may be separately defined or specified for different types of foods, such as beverages, snacks or solid foods. For example, representative threshold criteria for nutritional value are set forth in the table below:
Once the threshold criteria are developed or specified, the first method contemplates applying the threshold criteria to various food products to determine which food products satisfy the threshold criteria. For example, selection of a food product for analysis at block 40 may include selection of a beverage at block 54 of
In order to alert or to inform a consumer that a food product satisfies all of the threshold criteria for nutritional value, as determined in blocks 22-40, a distinctive logo may be applied to the food product. Preferably, the logo has some appealing design characteristics, colored features, or the like, to attract the interest of the potential purchaser or consumer, as indicated in block 48 of
An example of such a logo 60 appears in
Logo 60 may be separately affixed to a food product, printed on a label that is attached to a food product, formed in the container for the food product, or otherwise displayed on the packaging of the food product. Logo 60 is shown affixed to each food product 62 that is displayed in a display 64 in
When the logos 60 are applied to qualifying food products 62 that satisfy all of the requisite criteria of a selected method, the food products are distributed for sale to customers with the applied logo 60, as indicated in block 50 of
A second method of developing threshold criteria for use in analyzing food products is shown in
In accordance with the second method beginning at block 70, a minimum level of at least one nutritional ingredient that provides an efficacious effect is defined in blocks 84-90 of
In block 88, a minimum weight percentage of the fiber content of the food product may be defined. A minimum weight percentage of the protein in the food product may be defined, as in block 90. Of course, additional blocks could be added to
Blocks 92 through 102 provide similar steps or operations to the blocks 42-52 of
A third method of developing threshold criteria for use in analyzing food products is shown in
In the third method beginning at block 110 in
Food products are selected at block 120 for review to determine if the selected food products satisfy the minimum reduction criteria of blocks 112-118, if all criteria are applicable. Instead of reviewing one or more selected food products in block 120, the review may be of all food products of a company, as in block 122. By applying the criteria of the applicable blocks 112-118 to the food products, it is determined which food products satisfy the selected threshold criteria in block 124. A distinctive logo, such as logo 60 in
In the fourth method beginning at block 180 in
As previously mentioned, the review of food products to determine which food products meet the developed criteria, in accordance with any of the first, second, third or fourth methods presented above, may be automated. To this end, a data processing system, generally designated 134, in
For example, the criteria to be used in analyzing the food products; the information on the types of food products available for analysis and information on the ingredients in the food products may be entered on keyboard 140, read off of a CD that may be inserted into a CD drive 144 or transferred from any other data storage medium. Other means of entering criteria and information into the database, and for initiating food product review or analysis, may also be employed, as desired.
Other system users 146 may participate in formulating criteria for the various methods employed, enter data concerning food products, initiate food product reviews and/or review the results of analyses with computing devices, such as computing device 138, via the internet 136. Still other system users 150 may similarly communicate with database 136 via a wireless link 152, such as a wireless local area network (LAN) that is compatible, for example, with the IEEE 802.11 Wi Fi specification. Still other wireless links 152 may be provided by radio frequency transmission, satellite links and the like.
Beginning at block 160,
Next, in blocks 168-172, corresponding information about selected food products, or all of the food products of a company, are input into database 136, including nutritional value data for each food product in block 168, nutritional value data for each food product in block 170 and minimum reduction data for each food product in block 172. Of course, not all of the above information need be entered into database 136 if any selected food product is to be reviewed for less than all three methods. The type of analysis desired (first method, second method, third method, fourth method or any combination of the four methods) is selected at block 174, which may be initiated by an entry on keyboard 140 in
Then, in accordance with the selected methods, the distinctive logo 60 is applied to the food products 62 which are then distributed and displayed with the distinctive logo for sale to consumers, as previously discussed in connection with the three methods presented above. Logos 60 may be of different colors to indicate that the food product satisfies the criteria of different methods, such as green for the nutritional value of the first method, red for ingredients having the efficacious effect of the second method, yellow for satisfying the minimum reduction of nutritionally negative component criteria of the third method or blue for satisfying the functional benefit of the fourth method. Thus, more than one logo 60 may be applied to a food product that meets the criteria of more than one method, if so desired.
Of course, other criteria may be developed for analyzing and reviewing food products to determine if the food products are eligible for application of the distinctive logo that consumers will learn to associate with a healthful food product. Similarly, other methods of utilizing the criteria to determine if a food product is eligible for application of the distinctive logo may be formulated.
While particular embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made therein without departing from the invention in its broader aspects.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/895,744 filed Jul. 21, 2004, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10895744 | Jul 2004 | US |
Child | 12209723 | US |