
Use this checklist to spot the difference between minimally processed, processed, and ultra-processed foods and discover a calming sense of understanding around food labeling.

Group One: Unprocessed & Minimally Processed
- Fish
- Milk
- Meat
- 100 percent fruit juice
- Tea (all types)
- Coffee
- Spices
- Dried herbs
- Tap, spring, and mineral water

Group Two: Processed Culinary Ingredients
Processed culinary ingredients are products extracted from natural foods or nature by pressing, grinding, crushing, pulverizing, and refining.
As long as they get used in moderation in culinary preparations based on natural or minimally processed foods, they can contribute to eclectic and delicious diets without rendering them nutritionally unbalanced. But some can be highly processed, such as rancid vegetable oil, or derived from low-quality sources, damaging our health. Try and choose high-quality culinary ingredients.
Processed culinary ingredient examples |
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Group Three: Processed
Processed foods change from their natural state by adding salt, oil, sugar, or other enhancer substances. Processed foods often have two or three ingredients.
It can be easy to forget that freshly made, crusty artisan sourdough and canned chickpeas are still processed, containing multiple ingredients, but that doesn’t necessarily make them “bad.”
Processed food examples |
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Group Four: Ultra-Processed
Ultra-processed foods include substances extracted from other foods, such as fats, starches, added sugars, and hydrogenated fats. They may also contain synthetic additives like artificial colors and flavours or stabilisers. These foods include soft drinks, frozen meals, processed meat, fast food, packaged cookies, cakes, and salty snacks. Studies show that nutrient availability in the small intestine is affected when food is ultra-processed because the food’s plant properties and animal cells get altered. Destructive health issues arise when ultra-processed foods replace unprocessed and minimally processed foods that contain vital nutrients for your health. It can be easy to spot ultra-processed foods because they usually contain numerous ingredients you’d never use in your kitchen. But repeatedly, ultra-processed foods get disguised in everyday foods we take for granted.
Ultra-processed food examples |
- Fatty, sweet, savoury, or salty packaged snacks
- Biscuits (cookies)
- Ice creams and frozen desserts
- Chocolates, candies, & confectionery in general
- Cola, soda, and other carbonated soft drinks
- ’Energy’ and sports drinks
- Canned or packaged or dehydrated (powdered), & other ‘instant’ soups, noodles, sauces, desserts, drink mixes, and seasonings
- Sweetened & flavoured yoghurts, including fruit yoghurts
- Dairy drinks, including chocolate milk
- Sweetened juices
- Margarine & spreads
- Pre-prepared (packaged) meat, fish, & vegetables
- Pre-prepared pizza and pasta dishes
- Pre-prepared burgers, hot dogs, sausages
- Pre-prepared poultry & fish ‘nuggets’ & ‘sticks’
- Other animal products made from remnants
- Packaged bread, hamburgers, & hot dog buns,
- Baked products containing ingredients such as hydrogenated vegetable fat, sugar, yeast, whey, emulsifiers, and other additives
- Breakfast cereals and bars
- Infant formulas and adult meal replacement shake (e.g., ‘slim fast.’)
- Pastries, cakes, and cake mixes
- Distilled alcoholic beverages like whisky, gin, rum, and vodka
