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Showing posts with label stevia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stevia. Show all posts

December 9, 2012

Uncle Ricky's Sugar-free Lemonade!


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http://theecohousewives.wordpress.com


Things are starting to get HOT here; it was +22 C yesterday here, which a pretty hot day for May here! And we are scheduled for even more of it. YAY!

One of my favourite ways to cool off on a hot day is lemonade. But powder mixes are full of sugar, and even homemade lemonade can have a lot in it. But then I went to Vancouver to visit family and friends, and enjoyed my Uncle Rick's sugar-free lemonade. He has been playing around with making his own drinks and pop at home, and I got to enjoy this tasty concoction.

I made myself a batch the other day and LOVED it! Now, even though it is sugar-free, it isn't full of the nasty fake sugars like aspartame or Splenda/sucralose. Instead, it is sweetened with stevia (for more info on this lovely plant, check out my post!)

So without further ado:

Uncle Ricky's Sugar-free Lemonade

1 cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
Add water to total 2 litres
Stir in 2 tsp of stevia powder (more to taste, if desired)

Pretty simple hey? Feel free to switch it up, add in some orange juice, some lime juice, whatever, as long as your squeezed juices measure to one cup total.
 
The self mixing jug and my hand-held citrus juicer-tools of the trade!
 Sit back, take a sip and ahhhhhhhhhhhh...relax!

January 25, 2011

Nature's Little Overachiever: Stevia


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http://theecohousewives.wordpress.com


Alright, if you know me, you know how I feel about fake sugars (aspartame, sucralose, you name it). They are chemically produced or altered, and they give me migraines (never a good sign)!

But I have a huge sweet tooth, accompanied by a desire to lose weight. And so begins my love affair with Stevia.

Stevia is a South American herb that has been used as a sweetener for hundreds of years. The leaves of this small, green Stevia rebaudiana plant can be 30 times sweeter than sugar. It used to be found mostly in health food stores, but now I can find it in packets at my local grocery store. It is available in a powdered or tincture (liquid) form. I have been told the liquid form can have a slight licorice flavour, but I use the powdered form.


Stevia has many excellent properties. The body does not metabolize the sweet glycosides from the stevia leaf or any of its processed forms - so there is no caloric intake. Stevia doesn't adversely affect blood glucose levels and may be used freely by diabetics.

Photo by Ethel Aardvark

I used stevia in my homemade frozen yogurt-and it worked great. A few little packets sweetened as much as a cup of sugar!
It can't be substituted in everything, as its texture is different from sugar. So meringues, icings, most cookies; anything where sugar's ability to stiffen and cream with butter is required-then I recommend using the real deal-sugar (unrefined when possible). Try it out in your coffee, on your (homemade) yogurt, anywhere you might be using aspartame or Splenda...

As the Canadian and USA governments slowly approve Stevia, you can now find it in place of artificial sweeteners in some mainstream brands. SoBe has a few of their drinks made with stevia, and the new 10Cal Vitamin water by Aquafina as has it. You'll often see the brand Purevia or Truvia on the bottle as the stevia brand.

Of course, with any new item your are introducing into your diet, do your research on stevia. The Japanese, Chinese, and Koreans have used stevia in foods and soft drinks for many years as an alternative to the artificial sweeteners. The wide use of stevia has been without any apparent harmful effects.

In 2006, the World Health Organization evaluated stevia and found no evidence that its sweet compounds, stevioside and rebaudioside A, have any carcinogenic activity.  The most recent studies seem to suggest stevia is safe, but there is a lack of human research to determine long-term risks.

In my opinion, anything natural has got to be a better and healthier option than artificial, chemical sweeteners!

Thanks to http://www.stevia.com/, http://www.vegetarian-nutrition.info/herbs/stevia.php and Wikipedia for some of the background info! Go to http://www.stevia.com/ for recipes, and to order some it if you find (GASP!) that your local grocery store doesn't have it.