Has anyone tried making homemade Qwest bars? Were they a success?
abbynormalartist
Posts: 318 Member
I have a homemade protein bar recipe that I LOVE but my husband is doing a low carb thing and according to him, my bars are too carb-y . He asked me to stock up on some Qwest bars, which we both like, but they're too dang pricey for how quickly we go through them. I have found some recipes online for Qwest bars but I'm curious to see if anyone else here has tried them. Were they hard to make? Did they taste anything like a Qwest bar? Have you tried making a big batch at once? Tell me your secrets!
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Replies
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Costco sells something like a generic quest bar, but with only two flavors - choc chip and brownie. I personally think they are too dry, but the choc chip is a reasonable sub for the quest one. And they are WAY cheaper. Worth trying to see if they work for you. If not, go back to trying homemade.
I did try once to make them. They changed their fiber a year or two ago and I no longer like them. The old fiber was ISO syrup, which you can buy to make them yourself (using a ziplock bag to form them) and even buy the quest protein powder to make them with (a little cheaper than their bars that way). ISO is WAY tastier than the soluable corn fiber they use now. That change totally broke my addiction to them (and I was eating 3-6 a day!).2 -
Costco sells something like a generic quest bar, but with only two flavors - choc chip and brownie. I personally think they are too dry, but the choc chip is a reasonable sub for the quest one. And they are WAY cheaper. Worth trying to see if they work for you. If not, go back to trying homemade.
I did try once to make them. They changed their fiber a year or two ago and I no longer like them. The old fiber was ISO syrup, which you can buy to make them yourself (using a ziplock bag to form them) and even buy the quest protein powder to make them with (a little cheaper than their bars that way). ISO is WAY tastier than the soluable corn fiber they use now. That change totally broke my addiction to them (and I was eating 3-6 a day!).
Great idea! If it's still cheaper AND saves me time, I'll all about it! Now to figure out who I know with a Costco membership....0 -
I've not made quest bars but I made these and got an even higher protein content. They turned out pretty good, and you can make them a thousand different ways with just a basic base dough. Huge too
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emmydoodles83 wrote: »
I've not made quest bars but I made these and got an even higher protein content. They turned out pretty good, and you can make them a thousand different ways with just a basic base dough. Huge too
Can't beat a cookie! Will you share your recipe?1 -
abbynormalartist wrote: »emmydoodles83 wrote: »
I've not made quest bars but I made these and got an even higher protein content. They turned out pretty good, and you can make them a thousand different ways with just a basic base dough. Huge too
Can't beat a cookie! Will you share your recipe?
I got it from this website, I just tweaked the ingredients a bit, like using coconut milk, and a salted caramel protein powder etc etc.
https://thebigmansworld.com/2017/06/21/copycat-lenny-larrys-complete-cookies-10-flavors/1 -
85 gram, Raw Organic Coconut Flour
136 g, Salted Caramel Protein Powder - Single Packet
8 tbsp, Almond Butter
6 tbsp(s), Coconut Milk - Dairy Free
4 Tbspn, White Chocolate Morsels
1 pack, macadamia nuts
4 Tbsp (21g), Honey
1tsp butter extract (optional, I think it's a good idea though)
1tsp Vanilla extract
here was my ingredients the nutrition was for 1/2 cookie:
294 calories
15g fat
23g carbs
19g protein
6g fiber
26% calcium
They were very dense and big, I tried to make them the same size as Lenny's. I will continue to tweak the ingredients though, they could have been a bit sweeter I probably wouldn't use honey again I think some other non liquid sweetener might be better. But they were still good.2 -
abbynormalartist wrote: »Costco sells something like a generic quest bar, but with only two flavors - choc chip and brownie. I personally think they are too dry, but the choc chip is a reasonable sub for the quest one. And they are WAY cheaper. Worth trying to see if they work for you. If not, go back to trying homemade.
I did try once to make them. They changed their fiber a year or two ago and I no longer like them. The old fiber was ISO syrup, which you can buy to make them yourself (using a ziplock bag to form them) and even buy the quest protein powder to make them with (a little cheaper than their bars that way). ISO is WAY tastier than the soluable corn fiber they use now. That change totally broke my addiction to them (and I was eating 3-6 a day!).
Great idea! If it's still cheaper AND saves me time, I'll all about it! Now to figure out who I know with a Costco membership....
Don't get too excited. They are nothing like a Quest bar. It's impossible to eat them without microwaving them first, and even then, you have to chew and chew and chew. They are much cheaper, but you will have to adjust your expectations immensely.1
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