What clean natural sweetener is best (UK)?
Daisy80
Posts: 755 Member
Hello
I really don't want to use artificial sweetener anymore and have recently started to eat clean. I am struggling a bit to find a real all natural sweetener that is clean. What would people recommend. Ideal something not too expensive that can also be used for cooking.
Any help would be appreciated!
I really don't want to use artificial sweetener anymore and have recently started to eat clean. I am struggling a bit to find a real all natural sweetener that is clean. What would people recommend. Ideal something not too expensive that can also be used for cooking.
Any help would be appreciated!
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Replies
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Not too sure on 'the best', but I did do a bit of research before settling on Agave Nectar - you can get it in Sainsbury's in the sugar aisle. I use it instead of sugar in my porridge - my hubby says it tastes different (he used to have it in his coffee before cutting it out completely) but I've never noticed )0
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I use honey, but I don't know if that counts.0
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Thank you for your replies!
The thing is that I don't really like honey or agave nectar in coffee. Also I have recently read something about agave nectar that I didn't like but really can't remember what it was :ohwell:
I find it really difficult to find something!0 -
I don't use sugar or sweetners so not too sure but isn't stevia natural?0
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I think it is difficult to get 100% stevia. The stuff you buy in the supermarket is all processed and most of the times has added ingredients.0
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Turbinado sugar, the brown kind. The brand in the U.S. is Sugar in the Raw.0
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Truvia is good.0
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You can get bona fide Stevia extract at Whole Foods. No additives except rice maltodextrin (1 gram) as a stabilizing base.0
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Sugar is natural. It's grown in sugar cane or sugar beet, soaked out with water and washed up clean.0
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I don't really want to eat normal sugar. It is not part of the clean eating principles..0
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I don't really want to eat normal sugar. It is not part of the clean eating principles..
Seems honey and maple syrup are your main options then.
Stevia is presumably "processed" and hence "not clean" - at least to have any intellectual rigour as the processing is at least as much as for sugar.
The process for agave nectar looks like the process for sugar.0
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