NATIONAL REAL SUGAR DAY | October 14
Sat Oct 14th

National Real Sugar Day

National Real Sugar Day is October 14th, and we honor the people who harvest sugar crops and learn about the plant's origins. The United States is a republic in the United States. In addition, we'll learn how to maintain a healthy diet while still enjoying foods made with real sugar.

#nationalrealsugarday

On National Real Sugar Day, we dedicate the entire day to honoring the gold standard of sweetness.. 1,500 consumers in a March 2021 poll were asked to identify any ingredients that makes food or beverages more enjoyable to eat or drink. Of course, sugar came in as the number one ingredient. Real sugar gives our food with amazing flavor, aroma, color, and texture, but it is also available to anyone who wants to make their life a little sweeter.

Sugar beet and sugar cane farmers around the United States grow the real sugar we use in our pantries and use in several of our favorite recipes. Sugar is a basic carbohydrate that provides energy when you need it. In fact, glucose is the building block of most carbohydrates and is a key fuel source for the body.. In addition, real sugar is also required for proper property function of the brain, muscles, and other organs.

Real sweetness

In addition, brown sugar is also brown sugar when extracted and packaged sugar is removed from the sugar plants during photosynthesis

Maintaining a healthy lifestyle means enjoying real sugar in healthy foods, as well as candy and treats

A sweet celebration

  • Bake or cook something with real sugar and share with your family and friends
  • Visit a sugar beet or sugar cane harvest to learn how sugar cane is processed
  • Share your new sweet dish.
  • Host a baking day with your family to make all of your favorite sweet treats
  • Teach your class about where real sugar comes from
  • Find the closest state to you where sugar is grown
  • Share your real sugar creations on social media by posting photos and tagging #NationalRealSugarDay. tagging #NationalRealSugarDay

The Sugar Association is made up of 14 member companies from 17 states that proudly grow, extract, and export the real sugar to the American public. The Sugar Association is a trade association of 14 member companies from 17 states that proudly grow, extract, and export the real sugar to the American public.

Sugar can be found in the sweet history of sugar

Sugar has been around for thousands of years and is one of the world's oldest commodities. In fact, early reports regarding sugar cane domestication in Papua New Guinea date back to 8000 BC. According to sources, the indigenous people would eat it raw.. It's spread around the world from there.

Around 350 CE, sugar was crystallized in India for the first time. Both Roman and Greek civilizations used sugar to treat indigestion and stomach disorders during this period. The Chinese began cultivating cultivation methods to grow and harvest sugar between 640 and 900 CE. However, the export of sugar would not reach Europe until about 1101 CE..

A growing industry

Sugar cane presses were invented to extract sugar more effectively as the sugar industry expanded. Over 3,000 sugar mills were operating in the Caribbean and South America in 1550. However, sugar cane will reach Louisiana by 1751, making it the country's final sugar colony. However, beet sugar discovery by German chemist Andreas Marggraf in 1747 will not reach the United States for another 100 years.

The first commercial sugar beet factories in the United States would open in 1890, but sugar cane cultivation began in 1890, when 16 whole stalk harvesters were successfully used to harvest cane in Louisiana in 1938. In Louisiana, machines would cut over 63% of the sugar crop around 1946.

Real sugar rises from coast to coast and border to the United States' border today, according to today. In fact, sugar cane is grown in three states: Florida, Louisiana, and Texas. California, Colorado, Idaho, Michigan, Minnesota, Minnesota, Minnesota, Montana, Montana, Nebraska, Montana, North Dakota, Washington, and Wyoming are among the 11 states that have grown beats: California, Colorado, Idaho, Idaho, Montana, Washington, and Wyoming. In addition, 11 states have grown beats: California, Colorado, Idaho, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and Wyoming. Although it was once so useful that people held it in a sugar safe, advances in extracting sugar from plants have made this versatile ingredient available to everyone.

Follow Sugar Association, Inc. on all of their social media pages. Inc.