Arrowhead Mills Organic Hot Cereal Oat

The most healthful breakfast is whole grain cereal. If you’re attempting to lose weight, control cholesterol or diabetes, or just need a lot of energy, your best bet is a hot cooked cereal of whole grains, such as oatmeal; or barley, brown rice or wheat berries cooked and served like oatmeal. Flavor it with raisins or other dried fruits, cinnamon, and perchance a handful of nuts such as pine nuts.

If you prefer cold cereal, you need to check the list of ingredients carefully. The FIRST ingredient ought to be a whole grain. Then scan through the entire list and if you see the words “partially hydrogenated,” put the box back on the shelf. We commend that you keep out of the way of foods with partially hydrogenated oils (or “trans fats”), and they still show up in a good deal of cereals (see the list below.)

Once you’ve annihilated all the brands made with refined grains or partially hydrogenated oils, check for ADDED sugars (you want little or none) and fiber (you want a lot.)

Raisins or other dried fruits will add a lot of grams of sugar to the listing on the nutrition panel; they are not distinguished from added sugars, so you may only estimate the amounts.

The fiber content listed on the nutrition label may be mixing up because it’s based on serving size, and very light cereals (such as puffed wheat) show little fiber per serving, but an worthy of acceptance or satisfactory amount when you adjust for weight. Cereals made from bran (the outer covering got rid of from whole grains) will have higher fiber content than cereals made from whole grains (which have the germ and starchy parts of the grains as well as the fiber), but they may be hard to digest.

2007 Update:I’m delighted to note that partially hydrogenated oils (trans fats) have been taken out of a heap of cereals. The old list included 56 brands with PHO’s; the new list has only 13! Most of the ordinary General Mills, Post and Quaker cereal brands no longer have them. Kelloggs is the one major cereal maker that has not yet got rid of them from some of their leading products; hopefully they will respond to buyer pressure soon.

Is it actually whole grain? Manufacturers have likewise responded to the call for more whole grains in our diet, so you will find a lot more selections that meet my recommendation of “whole grains as the primary ingredient”. However, galore that assert to be “whole grain” still include refined grains. You may need to do a great deal of detective work to see what you’re getting. One-ingredient whole grain cereals (i.e., shredded wheat, puffed wheat, oatmeal) are sure bets. If you see milled corn, corn meal, wheat flour or rice in

  • Recommended: Cereals made from Whole Grains

    (No trans fats, little or no added sugars; but check the list of ingredients — recipes may change.)

    Cheerios – General Mills

    Chex, Wheat or Multi Grain – General Mills

    Cinnamon Toast Crunch – General Mills

    Cinnamon Grahams – General Mills

    French Toast Crunch – General Mills

    Golden Grahams – General Mills

    Grape Nuts – Post

    Grape Nut Flakes – Post

    Great Grains, all varieties – Post

    Healthy Choice Toasted Brown Sugar Squares – Kelloggs

    Kashi (all varieties) – Kashi Company

    Life – Quaker

    Mini-Wheats, all varieties – Kelloggs

    Muesli – Familia

    Nutri-Grain, all varieties – Kelloggs

    Oatmeal Crisp, all varieties – General Mills

    Oatmeal Squares – Quaker

    Organic Healthy Fiber Multigrain Flakes – Health Valley

    Puffed Wheat – Quaker and others

    Shredded Wheat, all varieties and sizes – Post and others

    South Beach Diet Toasted Wheats

    Total – General Mills

    Uncle Sam – U.S. Mills

    Weetabix

    Wheaties – General Mills

    Barbara’s, Cascadian Farm, Mother’s, Nature’s Promise and other littler brands that specialize in “healthful” cereals (but always check the list of ingredients).

    Recommended: All Bran or High Bran Cereals

    (no trans fats, little or no added sugars. )

    100% Bran – Post

    All Bran, all varieties – Kelloggs

    Bran Flakes – Post

    Chex, Multi-Bran – General Mills

    Complete Wheat Bran Flakes – Kelloggs

    Complete Oat Bran Flakes – Kelloggs

    Cracklin’ Oat Bran – Kelloggs

    Crunchy Corn Bran – Quaker

    Fiber 7 Flakes – Health Valley

    Fiber One – General Mills

    Fruit & Bran – Post

    Granola, Low Fat – Kelloggs

    Oat Bran – Quaker

    Oat Bran Flakes – Health Valley

    Oat Bran Flakes with Raisins – Health Valley

    Organic Bran with Raisins – Health Valley

    Raisin Bran – Kelloggs

    Raisin Bran Flakes – Health Valley

    Raisin Bran, Whole Grain Wheat – Post

    Raisin Nut Bran – General Mills

    Shredded Wheat ‘n’ Bran – Post

    Total, Raisin Bran – General Mills

    Weight Watchers Flakes ‘n’ Fiber

    100% Natural Granola – Quaker

    Not Recommended – Cereals that Contain Partially Hydrogenated Oils (Trans Fats)*

    Many also are mainly refined grains and high in added sugars.

    Basic Four – General Mills

    Cocoa Krispies – Kelloggs

    Corn Pops – Kelloggs

    Froot Loops – Kelloggs

    Golden Crisp – Post

    Granola with Raisins, Low Fat – Kelloggs* (see note below)

    Healthy Choice Mueslix – Kelloggs

    Healthy Choice Almond Crunch with Raisins – Kelloggs

    Healthy Choice Low Fat Granola with Raisins – Kelloggs

    Mini-Swirlz – Kelloggs

    Smacks – Kelloggs

    Smart Start – Kelloggs

    Special K – Kelloggs

    Not Recommended – Cereals Made from Refined Grains

    Many of these also integrate a lot of added sugar

    Apple Jacks – Kelloggs

    Cap’n Crunch, all varieties – Quaker

    Chex, Rice or Corn – General Mills

    Cocoa Frosted Flakes – Kelloggs

    Cocoa Blasts – Quaker

    Cocoa Pebbles – Post

    Cocoa Puffs – General Mills

    Cookie Crisp/Chocolate Chip – General Mills

    Corn Pops – Kelloggs

    Corn Flakes – Kelloggs and others

    Count Chocula – General Mills

    Crispix – Kelloggs

    Frosted Flakes – Kelloggs

    Fruity Pebbles – Post

    Honey Bunches of Oats – Post

    Honey Comb – Post

    Honey Nut Clusters – General Mills

    Kix – General Mills

    Lucky Charms – General Mills

    Product 19 – Kelloggs

    Puffed Rice – Quaker

    Reese’s Peanut Butter Puffs – General Mills

    Rice Krispies, all varieties – Kelloggs

    Total Corn Flakes – General Mills

  • *When I checked these cereals on 1/26/07, Kelloggs’ Low Fat Granola with Raisins contained partially hydrogenated oils while their plain Low Fat Granola had none. I hope this means that Kelloggs is following the lead of the other cereal manufacturers and that PHO’s will soon be gone from all of their products. Meanwhile, protect yourself and check the list of ingredients! Cereal recipes change.


    Arrowhead Mills Organic Hot Cereal Oat

    Naturally nutritious. All natural. USDA organic. High fiber. Oat the enduring grain. First grown in Western Europe, this gem disseminate speedily around the globe. Steel Cut Oats have a sophisticated somewhat crunchy texture and a lovely toasted flavor for an extraordinary breakfast experience. From America’s heartland to your heart. Arrowhead Mills has been the pioneer and leader in organic and natural baking mixes, grains, cereals and nut butters since 1960. We believe in nature’s abundance and treat feed with respect – not chemicals! Capturing the essence of the world with organically grown ingredients, Arrowhead Mills takes you back to the fundamentals with the best – tasting most diverse selection of productions for home – baked goodness. Organic, wheat free, cholesterol free, sodium free, good source of Thiamin, vegetarian, no preservatives, high fiber. Certified organic by the Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA).


    Most helpful client reviews

    22 of 22 persons found the following review helpful.
    5I Love Steel Cut Oats
    By Philly Girl
    This is the best oatmeal that I’ve ever had. I now have my family eating it and they love it as well. It has twice the nutritional value of rolled oats, it’s organic, and has an oatier, nuttier, grainer flavor. Yes I said oatier.

    16 of 16 humans found the following review helpful.
    4Good, but not rather the Best
    By James A. Edison
    I don’t think I’ve had steel cut oats that I could describe as “bad”, but I have to say that these don’t rather rise to the level of McCann’s. The Arrowhead product is lots, cheaper, however, so overall it might be a better bet unless you want the sheer best.

    The deviations are subtle. For a good deal of reason I get a larger volume of cooked outs from 1 cup of McCann’s than I do from Arrowhead, and the McCann’s has a more of the distinguishable “nutty” flavor that makes steel cut oats so delicious.

    The two productions in truth have dissimilar cooking instructions. McCann’s calls for 30 minutes of cooking once the oats are put into boiling water. Arrowhead calls for 12 minutes of cooking after the oats are put into cold water and brought to a boil. Cooked that way the Arrowhead oats are markedly inferior, but cooked the McCann’s way they get much better.

    I’m still on a quest to find oats as good as I had in England at a couple of imagination places in London. Any ideas?

    10 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
    5Healthy and tasty!
    By J. Morton
    This product has much more health value than the regular old-fashioned rolled oats with a much better taste. The only drawback is the time it takes to cook on the stove. I have tried to microwave it but it still is crunchy or overflows even in big containers. This is unquestionably work the time even though to cook on the stove. High in fiber!

    See all 21 client reviews…

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