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​7 red flags to identify “ultra-processed” packaged foods​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 9, 2025, 09:43 IST
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7 red flags to identify “ultra-processed” packaged foods

Walk through any supermarket and it feels like stepping into a maze of promises. Bright packets call out with words like “healthy,” “natural,” and “light.” Shelves sparkle with snacks that look harmless, even wholesome. But not everything that looks inviting is truly food. Ultra-processed products are the impostors, engineered for taste and shelf life, not nourishment. They fill you up quickly but leave the body short on real fuel. The trick is to know when you’re holding one in your hands. Here are seven signs that whisper louder than the label.

2/9

Ingredient lists that never end

Turn a packet over and read. If the list looks more like a paragraph than a recipe, you’ve entered ultra-processed territory. Real food is spare and clear, rice, salt, water, a handful of others. When the label spills into twenty items, dotted with names that sound like they belong in a chemistry lab, that’s your sign to set it back on the shelf.

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Words you have never heard of

Butylated hydroxytoluene. Potassium sorbate. Maltodextrin. These aren’t words that belong in a kitchen. They’re additives and preservatives designed to stretch shelf life or fake flavour. If it doesn’t sound like something you’d keep in your pantry, it probably doesn’t belong on your plate.

4/9

Sugar hiding in plain sight

Sugar rarely announces itself directly. Instead, it sneaks in dressed as dextrose, glucose syrup, maltose, or caramel solids. Sometimes you’ll find three or four versions in one packet — all to trick the eye into missing just how much sweetness is inside. If the label reads like it’s playing word games, you’re looking at sugar in disguise.

5/9

Oils and fats that linger

That crunchy biscuit or ready-to-eat paratha often owes its texture to refined oils or hydrogenated fats. They keep the product crisp and shelf-stable but weigh heavy on the body. If you see the word “hydrogenated,” remember: what feels light in your hand can lodge deep within.

6/9

Colours brighter than nature

A neon-orange chip, a candy glowing highlighter pink, a drink shimmering like bottled emerald, these aren’t nature’s creations. They are pigments and “nature-identical” flavours engineered to lure the eye and trick the tongue. Real mango carries golden warmth, not electric orange; real spinach grows quietly in fields, not in bottles. When food shouts in colours too loud to be real, it isn’t nature speaking, it’s chemistry dressed up as flavour.

7/9

Salt in stealth mode

Unlike sugar, salt doesn’t need to hide, it simply sits in excess. Instant noodles, packaged soups, ready sauces are all loaded with sodium that adds addictive taste and ensures you come back for more. High salt makes the body hold water, leaving you bloated today and at risk tomorrow. If “salt” shows up among the first few ingredients, take note.

8/9

Promises that shout too loudly

“High-protein!” “Fortified with vitamins!” “Whole grain goodness!” The louder the packet shouts, the more carefully you should listen. These claims are often a glossy cover for refined flours, sweeteners, and preservatives sprinkled with just enough “good” to sound convincing. The simplest test is this: if it needs a slogan to prove it’s healthy, it probably isn’t. Real nourishment rarely comes with neon promises; it sits quietly in unprocessed foods, fresh produce, and traditional staples that don’t need marketing to validate their worth.

9/9

Choosing better, choosing simpler

Spotting ultra-processed foods is less about paranoia, more about awareness. The closer food is to its natural form, the fewer red flags you’ll find. Short ingredient lists, familiar names, no neon colours or overblown promises - these are the signs of food that nourishes. In the end, the best meals don’t come in shiny wrappers. They come from ingredients you recognise, cooked in ways you trust, served with flavours that need no disguise.

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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 11.52PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service