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Dieting & exercise

Reducing sugar intake

(224 Posts)
NanKate Sun 08-May-16 08:02:37

I am shortly going to have a rethink about my diet and cut back pretty drastically on sugar. I eat sensibly already and am only slightly overweight but realise there are many hidden sugars in what I eat.

Two questions. Can you recommend any BASIC books on diet and sugar, I am not a great cook and can't be bothered with fiddly recipes ?

Secondly suggest any low sugar to buy or bake that are low sugar ? I do like one biccy with my coffee or tea.

NanKate Tue 24-May-16 09:39:03

Thanks Anya and all. Yes it is the chewy crunchy feelings I miss and will follow up on biscotti, which I love but thought were off bounds and shysal I will look up the choc mousse which I can almost taste now.

I know I am going to regret saying this but heyho. Jing I can tell you have a good sense of humour, you often make me laugh, however I notice from time to time on this thread you seem to sabotage the help other Gransnetters kindly give me, when I am at a bit of a wobbly time in my life. I wonder if, a bit like my late mum, you like a bit of an Argie Bargie? Please don't ask me to give examples as I feel too flippin' tired to do anything. smile PAX

shysal Tue 24-May-16 09:21:26

Just while we are off subject, here is a recipe which my GCs love as a cake or pudding, using Golden Syrup. Definitely not low sugar!

www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/1566633/golden-syrup-cake

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 09:13:00

Oops! Sorry to wander from the purpose of this thread.

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 09:12:13

There will come a day when you find you just need nothing but treacle sarnies for your lunch and you will scoff six slices straight off. But it will be alright because the bread will be wholemeal. smile

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 09:09:15

shock. Are they all full? You've got some willpower!

thatbags Tue 24-May-16 09:09:00

And my grandad used to keep nails and screws in syrup tins. #nostalgia

thatbags Tue 24-May-16 09:07:13

Squirty syrup is more expensive (quite a lot more expensive). I'll stick with the tins.

Besides, syrup tins make me happy:

shysal Tue 24-May-16 09:04:53

NanKate, are you following the low carb thread too? Not a chewy dessert but delicious, is the Elizabeth David classic chocolate mousse mentioned a few times on there. Very easy to make.

www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/wordofmouth/2010/jul/22/how-to-make-chocolate-mousse

Anya Tue 24-May-16 09:02:21

That was to NanKate

janeainsworth Tue 24-May-16 09:02:08

Bags As instructed by my domestic science teacher circa 1962:

Put tablespoon in syrup tin.
Remove from tin, twirling spoon round and round as quickly as you can until syrup stops dripping.
Scrape syrup from tablespoon with knife into whatever you are making.

It's easier now that syrup comes in squirty-type packaging as you can squirt directly onto your tablespoon.

I agree that measuring syrup isn't an exact science. But neither are 'heaped' tablespoons, which is how we were taught to measure out flour. Never used scales.

By the way has anyone tried date nectar? Seriously yummy!

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 09:01:04

One loaded spoonful of golden syrup is equal to one in the bowl and some over the work surface, with a bit to spare for the floor.

I hate cooking with Goldn Syrup!

Anya Tue 24-May-16 09:00:58

Would you settle for chewy in your main course perhaps? I made lamb kebabs last night and the lamb was very tough chewy.

Just thread bite-sized pieces mushroom, tomatoes, peppers, onion and lamb onto a skewer, brush with a little oil and season. I gridded this for about 15 (?) minutes turning quite often. Took me ages to eat so that's a plus.

Think sometimes our food doesn't give us enough of a 'work-out' if it's mushy soft

Or perhaps if it's something sweet you want then biscotti? Sainsburys do a packet with small ones with nuts in. Two of those with a coffee or tea perhaps? Only dunk if you feel you're in danger of breaking your teeth wink

thatbags Tue 24-May-16 08:59:20

PS if you want to add some protein to your flapjacks, nankate, my nutty, seedy flapjack recipe is here: www.gransnet.com/recipes/dish/5426-Nutty-seedy-flapjack-recipe

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 08:59:03

I still cook things like Yorkshire pudding, and crumbles, using spoonfuls. Works fine.

thatbags Tue 24-May-16 08:56:22

My approach to four tablespoons of syrup is to plunge a tablespoon into the tin, pull it out well loaded and twirl it till it gets to my mixing bowl. Done. Estimate but, hell, I don't care.

I remember my mum teaching me about spoon measures as equivalents to weights. A heaped tablespoon of flour is about an ounce (near enough, dam it! did nobody else's grandma cook using spoonfuls wink?); a rounded tablespoon of sugar is about an ounce; butter's easy; eggs are easy; hey presto, one cake.

So, in similar mode, I reckon one well loaded Tbsp syrup is near enough equal to four tiresomely measured separate ones smile

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 08:52:52

(I didn't actually mention a weight reducing diet, to be fair) smile

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 24-May-16 08:50:17

Oh right. Perhap's a very small portion of apple crumble then? Without any sugar in the crumble topping? Healthy enough I would say.

BBbevan Tue 24-May-16 08:42:06

I think you have to have a warm spoon to measure anything like syrup

NanKate Tue 24-May-16 07:54:35

Thanks Jane I shall make those and DH will cut into tiny squares, can taste it now.

I am not on a diet Jing just a healthy eating plan so as to avoid type 2 Diabetes which I could be prone to as I am on steroids. Someone else with the same illness as me said if only someone had warned her about the possibility of diabetes (which she now has) she would have taken action from day 1 and that is what I am doing.

I am going to a friend's birthday tea today and will have small portions of the sugary stuff, as you have said before it is all about moderation.

thatbags Tue 24-May-16 07:53:26

janea, how does anyone measure syrup in tablespoons? It doesn't behave itself well enough to be measured that exactly in my experience.

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 23-May-16 22:07:55

Only on a weekend though. [halo]

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 23-May-16 22:07:10

I'll eat 'em! grin

merlotgran Mon 23-May-16 22:05:16

That's my diet, jingl. I bake cakes and get other people to eat them grin

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 23-May-16 21:47:16

You can't have your cake and eat it! Well, not your cake as such....

jinglbellsfrocks Mon 23-May-16 21:45:36

But..... shouldn't you expect to miss some things when you are on a diet? Isn't that the nature of the beast? confused

#bestrong