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Try healthy eats that help fight diabetes, heart disease, migraines and more.
By WomansDay.comTue, Aug 09 2011 at 12:00 PM EST



















We all know Salsa is a great low cal, low sugar food. This is the best, most incredible Salsa I have ever tasted and made. It is an authentic, great Mexican recipe and I have made it for years. It is a staple at my dinner parties. Enjoy!!
Serving Size: 8 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : Cajun Gifts
Mexican Vegetables
Vegetarian
Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
1 lg Clove garlic
2 Jalapeno chilies -- seeds
Removed (2 to
6 )
4 sm Tomatillos -- (about 1/2
Cup)
6 Italian plum tomatoes --
Diced (2 1/2 cups)
1 md Onion -- finely diced
1/2 Green Italian pepper -- OR
1/2 Green bell pepper -- finely
Diced
2 tb Coarsely chopped parsley
2 tb Coarsely chopped cilantro
1 Lime -- (about 1 tbsp.)
1/2 ts Salt
Cumin -- to taste
(optional)
In a food processor, finely chop garlic and jalapeños.
Add tomatillos and chop again. Remove the mixture and
combine it with the remaining ingredients. The salsa
can be served immediately, but the flavors will blend
nicely if it’s chilled for several hours or overnight.
by jbiggars63
I found this article for those of you that need more ideas for low carb, low sugar snacks! Hope you like it!
It's important to have access to nutritious low-carb snack food so that if you get hungry between meals you won't reach for crackers and chips.
Ideally, a low-carb snack should have protein, healthy fat, and some fiber (so the best thing would be to have some raw veggies with your eggs or jerky). Here are some easy snack ideas.
- Celery with peanut butter
- Celery with tuna salad
- Hard boiled eggs
- Deviled eggs
- Dill pickles and cheddar cheese (no kidding, it's a great combo)
- 1/4 cup berries with 1/3 cup cottage cheese
- Nuts (keep raw ones in the freezer if you think you'll overeat them)
- Sunflower seeds (get them in the shell so it will take longer to eat them)
- Other seeds (How to Toast Pumpkin or Squash Seeds)
- Low-Carb Trail Mix
- Jerky (beef or turkey -- try to find low-sugar varieties)
- Low-carb shakes
- Cheese sticks, such as string cheese
- Sugar-free Jello, alone or with cottage cheese and a sprinkling of nuts
- Make sugar-free lime Jello with part coconut milk -- For a large package, dissolve the powder in a cup of boiling water, add a can of coconut milk, and then add the rest of the water. Stir well.
- Pepperoni "chips" -- Zap the slices in the microwave
- Cheese with a few apple slices
- 4-ounce plain or sugar-free yogurt with berries and flax seed meal
- Smoked salmon and cream cheese on cucumber slices
- Lettuce Roll-ups -- Roll luncheon meat, egg salad, tuna or other filling and veggies in lettuce leaves
- Lunch Meat Roll-ups -- Roll cheese or veggies in lunch meat (read the labels for carbs on the lunch meat)
- Spread bean dip, spinach dip, or other low-carb dip or spread on the lunch meat or lettuce and then roll it up
- Raw veggies and spinach dip, or other low-carb dip
- Pork rinds, with or without dip
- Ricotta cheese with fruit and/or nuts and/or flax seed meal
- Mushrooms with cheese spread inside (or other spreads or dips)
- Low-carb snack bars (watch out for sugar alcohols, especially maltitol)
- Product Review: Atkins Advantage Bars
- Pepperoni Chips -- Microwave pepperoni slices until crisp. Great with cheeses and dips
- Garlic Parmesan Flax Seed Crackers
- Parmesan Crisps -- Good when you want a crunchy snack.
- Peanut Butter Protein Balls
How We Get Sugar
Historically, honey and maple syrup have been used to replace sugar.
Pure cornstarch is by far the biggest source of the other carbohydrate sweeteners used by today’s food manufacturers. Cornstarch is split into a variety of smaller fragments (called dextrins) with acid or enzymes. The smaller fragments are then converted into the various cornstarch sweeteners used by today’s food manufacturers.
Hydrolysis is the term used to describe the overall process where starch is converted into various sweeteners.
Sweetener products made by cornstarch hydrolysis include dextrose, corn syrup, corn syrup solids, maltodextrin, high fructose corn syrup, and crystalline fructose.
A juice concentrate is the syrup produced after water, fiber and nutrients are removed from the original fruit juice.
A newer class of alternative carbohydrate sweeteners is the sugar alcohols. While sugar alcohols are neither sugars nor alcohols, they are so-named because they are manufactured from traditional carbohydrates. Sugar alcohols bear a close resemblance to the sugars from which their names are derived. What is honey? Honey is the mixture of sugars that bees produce from plant nectar. On average, honey is nearly 20% water, and contains about 40% fructose, 30% glucose and 1% sucrose. The remainder is a mixture of other sugars and minute traces of naturally present acids, vitamins, minerals and enzymes. Honey’s flavor depends on the source (clover, orange blossom, sage, etc) of nectar. What is maple syrup? Maple syrup is the mixture of sugars formed when the sap of sugar maple trees is boiled down to a thick syrup. Maple sugar contains about 33% water and 60% sucrose. The remainder is a mixture of glucose, other sugars and minute traces of naturally present acids, minerals and some B-vitamins. What is dextrose? Dextrose is the commercial name used for the crystalline glucose produced from starch. If the crystallized dextrose (glucose) contains no water, it is listed as “dextrose anhydrous" or “anhydrous dextrose" in an ingredient statement. If the crystallized dextrose contains one molecule of water, it will be listed as “dextrose" or “dextrose monohydrate" in an ingredient statement. The majority of the dextrose listed in food ingredient statements began as cornstarch. Food manufacturers may list dextrose produced from cornstarch as “corn sugar" in an ingredient statement. If the dextrose comes from another source like rice or wheat, the ingredient list would read “rice sugar" or “wheat sugar," respectively. Dextrose is used in many baking products like cake mixes and frostings, snack foods like cookies, crackers and pretzels, and desserts like custards and sherbets. Dextrose is also used as a filler in the single-serve, table-top packets of the common artificial sweeteners. What is corn syrup? The singular term “corn syrup" is somewhat of a misnomer because it is used to identify a group of sweeteners that differ from one another simply by the amount of dextrose (glucose) present in the commercial syrup. Since only a single type of corn syrup is generally used in a food product, the term “corn syrup" is permitted in an ingredient statement. However, consumers have no idea how much glucose is contained in the particular “corn syrup" listed in an ingredient statement. A commercial “corn syrup" may contain between 20% and 98% dextrose (glucose). “Corn syrup" may also be called “glucose syrup" in an ingredient list. Corn syrups are used in many of today’s salad dressings, tomato sauces, powdered drink mixes, fruit drinks and juices, and frozen desserts like pudding and ice milk. What are corn syrup solids? When a corn syrup has been concentrated to contain less than 10% water, it can be listed as “corn syrup solids" in an ingredient statement. To qualify as “corn syrup solids," the glucose (dextrose) content must be at least 88% of the weight of the concentrated syrup. This product can be called “dried glucose syrup" or “glucose syrup solids" in an ingredient list. Corn syrup solids are used in the same types of foods as dextrose and corn syrups. What is maltodextrin? A maltodextrin is a short chain of molecularly linked dextrose (glucose) molecules, and is manufactured by regulating the hydrolysis of starch. Typical commercial maltodextrins contain as few as three and as many as nineteen linked dextrose units. While the singular term “maltodextrin" is permitted in an ingredient statement, the term “maltodextrin" can be applied to any starch hydrolysis product that contains fewer than 20 dextrose (glucose) units linked together. This means that the term “maltodextrin" stands for a family of products, not a single distinct ingredient. Additionally, today’s commercially important maltodextrin products are produced from corn, potato or rice. Unlike the other starch sweeteners, the undefined term “maltodextrin" can be used in an ingredient list no matter the original source of starch. Maltodextrins are used in a wide array of foods, from canned fruits to snacks. Maltodextrins may also be an ingredient in the single-serve, table-top packet of some artificial sweeteners. What is high fructose corn syrup? Corn syrups enriched with fructose are manufactured from syrups that have been treated to contain as much dextrose (glucose) as possible. Nearly all the glucose in these dextrose-rich corn syrups is transformed into fructose with enzymes. The fructose-enriched syrups are then blended with dextrose syrups. After blending, commercial fructose corn syrups contain either 42% or 55% fructose by weight. It is becoming more common to further process fructose-enriched corn syrups to increase fructose content. These enhanced fructose corn syrups contain at least 95% fructose by weight. Like ingredient terms permitted for other sweeteners manufactured from starch, the descriptor “high fructose corn syrup" denotes more than one product. The generic term “high fructose corn syrup" or its acronym “HFCS" is used in food and beverage ingredient statements. Thus, the term “high fructose corn syrup" or “HFCS" represents a family of three fundamentally different products, not a unique single ingredient. The vast majority of the high fructose corn syrup containing 55% fructose is used to sweeten carbonated soft drinks and other flavored beverages. Minor amounts are used in frozen dairy products. Essentially all foods listing “high fructose corn syrup" as an ingredient contain the syrup with 42% fructose. The 95% fructose corn syrup is becoming more common in beverages, canned fruits, confectionery products and dessert syrups. What is crystalline fructose? Crystalline fructose is produced by allowing the fructose to crystallize from a fructose-enriched corn syrup. The term “crystalline fructose" is listed in the ingredient statements of foods and beverages using this corn sweetener. It is important to understand that the “crystalline fructose" listed as an ingredient comes from cornstarch, not fruit. Crystalline fructose can be used in the same foods as the high fructose corn syrups, or in any food that contains sugar. What are juice concentrates? Juice concentrates may be used to directly replace sugar. These syrups are made by first heating fruit juices to remove water, and then treating with enzymes and filtering to strip all characteristic color and natural flavor from the original juice. Because of their bland initial color and flavor, grapes and pears are the primary sources of the juice concentrates used as sugar replacers. Juice concentrates that replace sugar contain traces of sucrose, and variable amounts of fructose and glucose. If a pear juice concentrate is used, the phrase “pear juice concentrate," or a variation, would appear in the ingredient list. Juice concentrates are used in any foods where corn syrups have replaced sugar. They are particularly prominent in baked goods, jams and jellies, and frozen confections. |