国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image

Is Oat Milk Actually Good for You?

The popular brand Oatly claims it鈥檚 a health food. The internet claims it鈥檚 more like a can of Coca-Cola.

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Last week听the internet mob turned its eye on an unsuspecting subject: oat milk. It started with 听Katherine Champagne, who 听in a tweet on April 5: 鈥淚鈥檓 still in awe that Oatly created super sugar grain juice, cut it with canola oil, and then successfully used (amazing) marketing to convince everyone that no, this is Good.鈥 Attached was a screenshot from听鈥,鈥 an August 2020 story written by 听that ran in听the听. A business writer and digital entrepreneur, Eliason sought to expose Oatly, a wildly popular milk substitute made primarily from oats, for what he claims it really is: junk food.

Predictably, nutrition听Twitter听went nuts. Plenty of the were along the lines of:听How dare they market this glorified sugar syrup as healthy!听 were more , pointing out that oat milk is far from a 鈥渟uper sugar grain juice鈥 and that most consumers听aren鈥檛 guzzling the stuff in the quantities (a cup and a half at a time) that Eliason鈥攚ho has no nutritional education or credentials鈥攕uggested in his article. To be honest, after听writing about nutrition for a decade,听the only thing that surprises me about the controversy听is that anyone finds听the fact that Oatly is mostly marketing听surprising at all.

Eliason鈥檚 newsletter story starts by chronicling the long history of brands听using misleading health claims to posit that products are better for you than they actually are. He uses the sugar industry, the tobacco industry, and Coca-Cola as examples of this kind of marketing. Then听he argues that Oatly is doing the same thing. The article suggests听that, like Coke, Oatly is nothing more than a sugar-laden processed drink that has tricked听consumers into believing it should be a staple in their diet. He鈥檚 right in some ways (more on that later), but there鈥檚 a pretty glaring flaw in his argument.

Oatly Is Not听Coke

Before we talk about Oatly鈥檚 (admittedly sneaky) marketing strategy, let鈥檚 get something straight: Oatly oat milk is not nutritionally equivalent to Coke. An听 of Oatly contains 120 calories, 5听grams of fat, 16 grams of carbohydrates (including 7听grams of added听sugar),听and 3听grams of protein. A 12-ounce has a similar number of calories (140), but they come entirely from 38 grams of sugar. Those numbers听aren鈥檛 even close to equal. Even 12听ounces of Oatly鈥攚hich Eliason assumes is the amount people put in their morning coffee鈥攃ontains 24 grams of carbs and 11听grams of sugar. That鈥檚 still less than one-third of the sugar in Coke. Saying that the two are equivalent is absurd.

Compare Oatly with听, which has 122 calories, 5听grams of fat, 12听grams of carbs (all from naturally occurring听sugar), and 8听grams of protein in an eight-ounce serving. Oatly has less than half the protein of regular milk, about 30 percent more carbs, and a similar amount of fat and calories. And although dairy milk has almost twice as much sugar as Oatly, Eliason claims that the sugar in Oatly鈥攎altose鈥攊s significantly worse for you than the sugar in dairy鈥攍actose鈥攂ecause it has a higher glycemic load. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e spiking your blood sugar every time you add it to your coffee,鈥 he says.

Just like the marketing tactics that Eliason calls out, the glycemic-load argument falls into the category of true but misleading statements.听First, if you鈥檙e putting a couple ounces of Oatly in your coffee, you鈥檙e only听consuming听a few grams of sugar and won鈥檛 experience any drastic effects. Second, any protein-, fat-, or fiber-containing food will slow the absorption of this sugar. So听if you put some oat milk in the coffee that you drink alongside your breakfast, the whole 鈥渟piking your blood sugar鈥 thing is a moot point. And听to reiterate, even drinking a whole glass of Oatly on an empty stomach wouldn鈥檛 have nearly as big an effect on your blood sugar as drinking a can of Coke.

Misleading Marketing Is Nothing New

Oatly may not be Coca-Cola, but it is true that听its听marketing makes suspect health claims. In 2020, to trademark the phrase听鈥淚t鈥檚 like milk but made for humans鈥 from a campaign designed to convince people that cow鈥檚 milk is made for baby calves, and therefore听not meant for human consumption. Mothers of many species produce milk specifically to feed their infants. But that doesn鈥檛 mean it can鈥檛 provide nutrition for other species, too. There is a supporting cow鈥檚 milk听for human health, and, most important, unless you鈥檙e lactose intolerant, it鈥檚 certainly not going to hurt you.

The brand听also goes hard on the fact that its product contains fiber, calling it 鈥渢he most amazing in the drinkable world.鈥 But Oatly only contains two grams of fiber per serving, about 8听percent of what鈥檚 recommended daily for women听and 5听percent of what鈥檚 recommended for men. That鈥檚 nothing to get excited over. Oatlyalso emphasizes the whole 鈥淣o GMO鈥 thing, although both the 听and the听have repeatedly confirmed听the safety of the GMOs听available for consumption.

Oatly isn鈥檛 the first health-food company or trade organization to cherry-pick facts in its marketing.听; the听鈥淕ot Milk?鈥 campaign听implies that dairy consumption is essential for healthy human growth. In reality, there鈥檚 nothing magic about dairy milk; it鈥檚 a good source of calcium and vitamin D (which is added during processing), but a person can get these nutrients in other ways: Oatly and other plant-based milks are fortified with both nutrients, for example. Plus, many large studies on dairy consumption are听 by the dairy industry.

Even fruits and vegetables are marketed with vague and misleading claims. The California Avocado Commission听 with slogans like听鈥淣o wonder it鈥檚 good for pregnancy鈥 (because avocados contain folate) and听鈥淣o wonder it鈥檚 good for the eyes鈥 (because avocados contain lutein, a carotenoid that鈥檚 linked to improved eye health). Yes, these important nutrients are present in avocados, but they鈥檙e also found in similar levels in many other foods.

Superfoodsare often designated as such because of high levels of micronutrients, antioxidants, or other arbitrary characteristics,鈥 says Cara Harbstreet, a registered dietitian and owner of听. That鈥檚 what the avocado folks are trying to do. But there鈥檚 no clearly defined criteria鈥攍ike nutrient density or bioavailability鈥攖hat determines which foods qualify for that label, Harbstreet explains. It鈥檚 just good marketing.

So, yes, Oatly markets itself as a super nutritious and game-changing beverage, when actually it鈥檚 just another drink. But it鈥檚 patently unfair to proclaim听that Oatly is the same as Coke. 鈥淎 statement like this carries similar energy as the statement 鈥Sugar is as addicting as cocaine,鈥欌 Harbstreet says. Yes, the two substances light up the same pleasure centers in your brain, but so do sex, music, and cute baby animals. And sugar doesn鈥檛 meet other addiction criteria, like obsessive substance seeking and increased tolerance. 鈥淏oth statements听sound听sensational, elicit听fear or mistrust of a product, and make听you question what you knew or believed to be true,鈥 says Harbstreet. They鈥檙e also both based on half-truths.

It鈥檚 All Just Food

Oatly has taken a page out of the age-old food-marketing book by听making听its product听sound more听nutritious than it really is. This is a little devious, for sure, but it鈥檚 nothing new or unique. It鈥檚 how marketers trick us into thinking that听 should be central to a healthy diet, or that some whole foods are superfoods听and thus much better for us than other whole foods. Oatly is no superfood, but it鈥檚 also not horribly unhealthy. Nutritionally, it鈥檚 fairly similar to dairy milk, and actually has more calcium and vitamin D per cup听than the real stuff.听For people who choose plant-based diets, that鈥檚 pretty great.

At the end of the day, there鈥檚 truth on every side of the Oatly argument, but there鈥檚 also a whole lot of spin. Your best bet, as always, is to eat a variety of nutritious foods (and some of the not so nutritious ones that you love, too!)听and pay as little attention as possible to the way they鈥檙e marketed.

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online