Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,187
A few people have mentioned buying different bread to avoid HFCS, and that's one of the foods I've not been able to switch yet. (I have successfully switched ketchup, and not-quite-so-successfully maple syrup.)
Anyway, we currently eat a store brand whole wheat, which does have some HFCS in it, but I've tried 3 other breads without it, and DS hates them all! It seems all the good ones contain big bits of added stuff - more multi-grain than just whole wheat. (And I don't just mean they're including all parts of the wheat, and it's a little grainier - I mean like throwing in sunflower kernals to make it stand out to shoppers. Yummy to me as a grown-up, but "disgusting" texture-wise to a kid.)
So, if you've switched, what brand(s) do you buy?
I make a lot of our bread, but like to keep a store-bought loaf or two in the freezer for when I'm feeling lazy. Aunt Millie's and Koepplingers (sp?) both have "natural" product lines with no high fructose corn syrup that offer plain old white and wheat breads as an option, and Aunt Millie's is one of very few mainstream brands I've found that makes hot dog/hamburger buns without HFCS. Our locally-owned grocery also carries Spartan brand (I don't know if you'd find that outside of Michigan/the Great Lakes region), which doesn't use HFCS in their "homestyle" line. Also, if your store has an actual bakery department, that often gives you more options because most small bakers don't use HFCS or other "industrial" food additives due to cost/storage/logistics.
Where do the manufacturers rights to sell end and our right to reject poor options begin? 
