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Oatmeal cookies!
One resource I couldn't live without is a recipe analyzer. I'm sure there are plenty out there, but I use this one. You enter the ingredients and how many servings you expect to reap from the recipe and voila! It kicks out a nutrition label for your recipe. It's been a great tool for trying new recipes at home. I made a great pumpkin loaf with vanilla yogurt and my great grandma's oatmeal cookies. (Yeah, I've been craving some sweets lately!)
One reason I've experimented with sweets is that I've been on the hunt for Real Food alternatives to Big Food / Diet Industry snacks. Main gripes with so many of these cookies and bars:
- Don't have all that fewer calories
- Taste like chemically-flavored cardboard
- Contain dozens of unrecognizable and/or unpronounceable ingredients
- Shelf life of centuries
The only one I've made some peace with is Luna. Usually 180 calories. I like the Peppermint Stick ones once in a while. But I was looking at my oatmeal cookie recipe and admiring its mere 5 simple, staple ingredients. And using the recipe analyzer (I picture a sci-fi type laser ray probing the cookie dough, abbracadabra!) I discovered each cookie has less than 100 calories and some fiber. No, it's not an apple, but I stuck the finished cookies in the freezer and having a couple as a snack has made me feel very satisfied. Mmm, I made these...and I didn't use any molybdenum glycinate. I realize some people can't have cookies, even frozen ones, in stock. Actually, I am that person, but for some reason, perhaps because I was armed with the caloric "damage" information and knew I had made them as a homemade treat for myself, I didn't go overboard.
As a favor to my mother, for my initial foray, I made the recipe "as is" - no crazy yogurt or applesauce substitutions. Which means there's a lot of sugar in these suckers. And I'm ok with that for the most part. However, I would like to experiment more with some healthy substitutions, just so long as the integrity of the recipe isn't completely compromised. (For example, I don't want to repeat the Great Spaghetti Squash Switcheroo of my WW days. That's NOT spaghetti. I'm not fooled and now I hate life. I like squash enough, but I like pasta, too. Alright, I've managed to refind my will to live....)
So if anyone knows about subbing out ingredients in baking, please drop me a line. Is applesauce generally a sub for butter? Or sugar? And yogurt? I would like to take a recipe I know I like and maybe sub out 1/2 of a less healthy ingredient (sugar) with a better choice and see how that comes out. It will likely take some experimentation, I suppose.
I bake all the time sans fat and lower sugar. There's zucchini/carrot bread in the oven as we speak.
ReplyDeleteI usually sub a couple of ripe bananas or a pureed apple for the fat in cake or cookie recipes, and I use agave syrup instead of sugar. (Same amount of calories, but sweeter, lower on the glycemic index, takes longer to be absorbed into your system). You could also just cut the sugar that's called for in half. Most recipes call for way too much sugar anyway.
There's some trial and error involved in getting it right, but so far I've had no complaints about my baked goods! Good luck. :)
Cindy
Aaah, bananas, yes! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThat recipe analyzer site is brilliant! Thanks I didn't know about that.
ReplyDeleteAnd a good tip about the ripe bananas from Cindy!