There's Fiber Added To Coke's Latest Diet Drink, Coca-Cola Plus. Yes, Fiber.

Surprise!
Open Image Modal
Coca-Cola

Coca-Cola recently unveiled a new soda with an ingredient that’s sure to go down smoothly with its customers: dietary fiber. 

The beverage company introduced the product, which is called Coca-Cola Plus, in February. The soda is only sold in Japan and contains five grams of indigestible dextrin (which is a form of dietary fiber). 

According to an announcement from Coke back in February, the product is a part of Coca-Cola Japan’s Food of Specified Health Use (FOSHU) drinks. FOSHU drinks are meant to appeal to Japan’s health conscious consumers who are 40 and older. Coke, which has had a popular FOSHU tea drink in the market since 2014, said it took over a decade to research and develop Coke Plus, which was recently approved by the Japanese government. However, people aren’t too sure if its “healthy” claims will actually do that much to help consumers. 

“Drinking one Coca-Cola Plus per day with food will help suppress fat absorption and help moderate the levels of triglycerides in the blood after eating,” the company claimed in a press release. 

Companies adding dietary fiber to its drinks is nothing new. Pepsi added dietary fiber to drinks in its Japanese market a few years ago and made similar claims about fat absorption and triglycerides that Coke did in the statement above. 

“Unless Pepsi can provide data from controlled studies in humans to the contrary, their claim should be regarded as bogus and deceptive,” Walter Willett, Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition and chair of the Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, told Time in 2012. 

HuffPost reached out to Miriam E. Nelson, Ph.D, one of the country’s leading nutritionists and director of the Sustainability Institute at the University of New Hampshire, to talk about the addition of dietary fiber to soda. 

“There is no evidence that providing fiber, sprinkling it in here or there, that that fiber has an overall health benefit, so that’s an important distinction,” Nelson told HuffPost. “The evidence for dietary fiber having a health-promoting impact is with eating a pattern of foods (like fruits and vegetables and whole grains) that provide that fiber.” 

Nelson said that adding the fiber won’t do anything harmful to the consumer, but just adding the fiber by itself won’t have any of the health attributes a fiber-rich diet would offer. But she did find one part “disturbing” about the fiber claims. 

“The companies are trying to add or create a positive halo or health attribute within a product that doesn’t have any health benefits,” Nelson said. “If it’s a sugar-sweetened beverage then it actually has a lot of negative health benefits, so it’s trying to counterbalance that. That’s the disturbing part, because I think they’re trying to connect with the consumer and create a health attribute where there isn’t one.” 

So if you want to add more fiber to your diet, it’s best to do it with fruits, veggies and whole grains. 

The HuffPost Lifestyle newsletter will make you happier and healthier, one email at a time. Sign up here.

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

The 6 Best Foods For Beating Belly Fat
Brown Rice(01 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in it: Whole grains

The belly-fat connection: People who reported eating three or more servings of whole grains per day had 10 percent less visceral adipose tissue (aka belly fat) than those whose diets included very few whole grains. (The study was published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition and counted one piece of whole grain bread or 1/2 cup of oatmeal as a serving of whole grains.) The catch? Whole grain intake didn't make any difference in belly fat if people were also eating four or more servings of refined grains per day (think anything made with white flour, and one piece of whole bread or 1/2 cup of white rice is one serving.) Those who got the most belly-fat-reducing benefit from their whole grains ate less than one daily serving of the refined stuff. Which means you can't chase your cup of brown rice with three pieces of white-bread toast.

More ideas of what to eat: Look for products that say "100 percent whole wheat" or "100 percent whole grain" on the packaging, not "multigrain" or simply "whole wheat," as those often contain some refined sources.
(credit:Photo: martinturzak /istockphoto)
Collard Greens(02 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in them: Calcium

The belly-fat connection: Researchers tracked the diets and abdominal fat of more than 100 premenopausal women for one year. The years before menopause are notorious for weight gain, but the researchers found that for every 100 mg of calcium women ate per day, they gained 1 inch less of the dangerous fat deep within their bellies than women who didn't get as much calcium. It's not exactly clear why calcium seems to make a difference, but the researchers propose two ideas. First, there's some research showing that calcium helps your body use estrogen more effectively, and estrogen is linked to less fat in your abdomen. Second, high-calcium diets may lower production of cortisol, the stress hormone that's linked to belly fat. The National Institutes of Health recommends getting at least 1,000 mg and no more than 2,500 mg of calcium per day.

More ideas of what to eat: Aside from the obvious sources like milk and yogurt, foods like tofu, kale and sardines are also high in calcium.
(credit:Photo: sffoodphoto /istockphoto)
Salmon(03 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in it: Polyunsaturated fats

The belly-fat connection: Unlike saturated fats, polyunsaturated fats don't pack on pounds around your middle. When researchers asked two groups of people to eat an extra 750 calories per day (if the researchers do a second of this study, we're signing up!) from either polyunsaturated fats or saturated fats, everyone put on some weight, but the saturated fat group gained more in the abdomen, while the polyunsaturated group's weight gain included more muscle mass. (Remember, the more muscle you have, the more calories you burn at rest. Another way to fight belly fat!) The researchers reported that while saturated fats seem to turn on genes that tell your body to store fat in your stomach area, polyunsaturated fats switch on genes in the same area that actually reduce fat storage.

More ideas of what to eat:Other fatty fish like trout, mackerel and herring.
(credit:Photo: LauriPatterson /istockphoto)
Olive or Canola Oil(04 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in them: Monounsaturated fats

The belly-fat connection: Adding canola oil to their diets helped people lose 1/4 pound of belly fat in four weeks, according to a study published in Obesity earlier this year. The subjects drank two smoothies per day supplemented with the oil, where the oil accounted for about 18 percent of their daily calories. By the end of the study, their blood pressure and triglyceride levels had dropped too.

More ideas of what to eat:Oils such as olive, peanut, safflower and sesame.
(credit:Photo: InaTs/istockphoto)
Bell Peppers(05 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in them: A wide variety of nutrients, thanks to the many colors they come in.

The belly-fat connection: Overweight young people whose diets included "nutrient-rich" vegetables (those that are dark green, orange or yellow) had 17 percent less abdominal fat than study subjects who didn't eat that type of produce, according to a study in the Journal of The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. (Researchers often refer to these vegetables as "nutrient-rich" because their vibrant colors mean they're high in nutrients like carotenoids and chlorophyll.) It's not clear why these deeply hued veggies may contribute to less belly fat (they're also high in fiber, which may play a role), but more reason to eat your vegetables isn't a bad thing.

More ideas of what to eat: Any vegetables with green, orange or yellow coloring should be on your grocery list, like Brussels sprouts, carrots, sweet potatoes and squash.
(credit:Photo: Elecstasy /istockphoto)
Lentils(06 of06)
Open Image Modal
What's in them: Soluble fiber

The belly-fat connection: For every additional 10 grams of soluble fiber (which legumes like lentils have a lot of) people ate per day, they gained 3.7 percent less visceral fat over five years. When they threw some moderate exercise into their routines, they kept off twice as much belly fat as those who didn't break a sweat.

More ideas of what to eat: In addition to legumes, load up on fruits, vegetables, seeds and whole grains—they're also high in soluble fiber. If you need some ideas, check out our list of 15 fiber-rich foods for a happier stomach.
(credit:Photo: cobraphoto /istockphoto)

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE