Water | Resources
Natural sweetener for home made applesauce for infant
Question from Ann
We have an abundance of apples this year and I have a 4 month old. I have made applesauce with the apples previously and have had to use a lot of sugar as they are the tart variety. I want to make applesauce this year and can it for my son as he is just starting to eat cereal but I don’t want to sweeten it w/ sugar. I am not sure if I’ll have to sweeten it at all but if it’s too tart he may not like it. I know babies under 12 months should avoid honey so I’m not sure if I should use any other natural sources.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Thanks much,
Debra’s Answer
I would get some sweet apples or apple juice and cook them down into Apple Syrup. And then use the apple syrup to sweeten the applesauce.
Or you could use evaporated cane juice (Sucanat or Rapadura), which would give a brown sugar flavor.
Whole leaf stevia
Question from Barbara
I am confused about stevia. Is it best to use only the whole leaf in dried or powder form. I mean the green powder as opposed to the white powder that says it is derived from the stevia leaf. Thank you
Debra’s Answer
It’s better to use the dried whole leaf (or fresh whole leaf, of course) or powdered whoe green leaf, rather than the white powder. This is the whole, unrefined stevia as it exists in nature (with water removed).
The white powder is a “fractionated” stevia, just the sweet part removed from the whole leaf. It is much easier to use and is more versatile, but it is “refined”.
The point about this is that nature supplies various substances within a context. For example, vitamin C comes in a package called an “orange”, along with water, fiber, and other nutrients and sugars. Nature’s intention is clearly that vitamin C is intended to be consumed with these other co-factors.
Does this mean we shouldn’t eat pure vitamin C? Well, it would be better if we took it with water and fiber and other nutrients, which is why many supplements say to take them with food.
When we take individual food components out of context, we open the door to imbalance. Nature never isolates and concentrates food components. They are always offered in context. And our bodies are designed to eat them in context. This is why I am moving in the direction of satisfying our natural desire for sweets with naturally sweet foods.
And fresh or dried stevia leaf is one of these naturally sweet foods. I have a living stevia plant right by my back door. As I pass by, if I want something sweet, I just pop a leaf in my mouth! Many edible flowers are sweet too. The red flowers of Pineapple Sage are very sweet, mint leaves are delicious and come in a number of flavors (try chocolate mint!) and anise produces licorice-flavored seeds. These are “natural candies” that require no sweetener, and they can all be grown in pots.
Fructose and Xylitol and other crystal sweeteners
Question from CLHallet
I was wondering if refined white sucrose from sugar beets or sugar cane is bad for use why is the refined white crystals of fructose and Xylitol not present the same issues?
Debra’s Answer
Actually, they do, but each in a different way.
Fructose crystals are highly refined corn syrup. I don’t recommend them. Xylitol is a sugar alcohol. Sugar alcohols are not sugar in the same way that refined cane or beet sugar is sugar. So a sugar alcohol crystal is a completely different thing.
Safely repair scratched wood finish
Question from Jennifer Shaw
Hi Debra,
We have a dark-stained wood crib (million dollar baby) that now has scratches. Our new baby will be here in June and we’d like to find a safe way to restain or touch up the scratches to help it look better. Are there any nontoxic options?
Debra’s Answer
Readers?
Nontoxic Wood Filler for Scratched Floors
Question from Laura
Ideally, I would not wear shoes in a house and damp mop the wood floors with water/vinegar every so often. In reality, I live in a house where people wear shoes, use a walker and regularly ( every few weeks) used the toxic floor treatments that make it hard for me to breathe.In the attached apartment, not always occupied, the smell lasts for many months. It hasn’t been done in the house for months now, but my mother is insisting on it. Is there any product that might fill in the scratches without all the toxic ingredients? Thanks.
Debra’s Answer
Readers?
Making apple cider syrup
Question from Laurie Porter
I am a small processor of over 75 varieties jams and jellies that I sell at my local farmer’s markets, and I’d like to know what the ratio of making apple cider syrup is. I’d also like more information on how these natural sweeteners behave in the making of jams and jellies. Right now, I use pure cane sugar, but I’d like to start producing my product without corn syrup additives or concentrated fruit juices I only make my product with fruit, sugar, and pektin.
We also make maple syrup with a 40 gallon to 1 gallon ratio. Is cider syrup similar?
Thanks,
laurie
Debra’s Answer
I don’t know exactly the ratio of cooking down apple cider syrup. I’ve made it and I just cook it until it “looks right.” But if you are familiar with making maple syrup, maybe you could standardize this and let us know. It is like making maple syrup in that you just cook it down to the right consistency.
I don’t know how it works in making jams and jellies. I’ve never made jam or jelly. A reader wrote to me about using something called Universal Pectin and their website says you can make jam with any sweetener using their pectin. So I would assume you could use apple syrup.
Please write again and let us know what you come up with.
Clabber Girl Sugar Replacer
Question from Linda
Hi Debra,
I was shopping in Walmart here in Kissimmee, FL and came across a sweetner called Clabber Girl Sugar Replacer. It has Sorbitol, Eythritol, Isomalt, Polydextrose, Acesulfime, Potassium and Neotame. Are these natural sweetners or should they be avoided?
Thanks,
Linda
Debra’s Answer
You may have heard the recommendation, “If you don’t recognize a food ingredient as a food, don’t eat it!” That applies to sweeteners as well.
Sorbitol, Eythritol, Isomalt, and Polydextrose are sugar alcohols. Acesulfime and Neotame are artificial sweeteners, not recommended. Potassium is a salt.
I wouldn’t use this product.
Sun Crystals
Question from Mom-of-2-soon-to-be-sugar-free
There is a new “natural” sweetener Sun Crystals, it claims to be 100% natural, Non-GM*
ingredients: Raw Cane Sugar & Erythritol
www.suncrystals.com/
perhaps your site can give the low down on this new comer.
Thank you,
Christine
Debra’s Answer
I’m not sure what they are referring to when they say “raw cane sugar” as I have seen cane sugar labeled “raw” when it wasn’t at all.
Erythritol is a sugar alcohol. You can read my opinion about them at Sweet Savvy: Sugar Alcohols.
Personally, I prefer to stick with sweeteners that come from nature, as they are.
Is 3-Years-New TOO New to be Non-Toxic?
Question from Susi Love
Hi Debra and community!
I have been offered a beautiful rental home at a REALLY good “friend discount” price, but it was newly built 3 years ago and I can still smell that “new home smell”. If I spent a month baking it, ozone-ating it, airing it out, do you think that would be enough to make it “safe” for me? I’m not sure, but I don’t think it was ever lived in, so it hasn’t been aired out much in that 3 years.
It was built with fermaldahyde-free insulation, and has a solar system on it, but all other materials (hard laminate flooring, regular paint, vinyl windows, fiberglass tub, and open beams that are stained with regular stain) are just the cheapest materials the builder could use. At least there isn’t any new carpet or linoleum…that’s the worst!
The kitchen cabinets are oak, recycled from an older home, so they should be fine and the counters are granite.
I would love to jump at this opportunity, but in it’s present condition it is definitely causing pretty intense symptoms in me.
Does anyone know how new is “too new” and if I slammed it with offgassing techniques if I could get it cleared out in a month or so? I would stay in my current home until it was cleared, but it’s only 3 doors down, so I could check in on it periodically.
Debra’s Answer
You could certainly try all the things you mentioned, but I wouldn’t agree to take the house until you’ve done those things and know it is safe for you. In this slow market, your friend may be willing to give you the time.
Evaporated Different From Crystallized?
Question from Tessa M
I just found your blog and I am impressed – so much help!
Recently, I have been trying to find an ice cream that has been sweetened with a natural sweetner. I have seen a few made with “evaporated cane juice” but was curious if that is the same as “crystallized raw cane juice?” I didn’t know if how they evaporate the cane juice took changed or added anything which would case it to no longer be a whole food? Any help would be great!!
Debra’s Answer
I’m going to give you a quick answer here, though there is more explanation. One day I will sit down and write it all out.
All cane sugar starts with the raw sugar cane. It is very fiberous. If you take a piece in your mouth and chew on it, it will taste very sweet as the juice is released. If you can get fresh sugar cane (we can here in Florida), try it. It is a whole, sweet food with lots of nutrients.
The next step is to press the cane in a very heavy duty machine that presses the juice from the fiber. I’ve looked for a hand-crank sugar cane press, and the few that exist are expensive. It’s not like juicing oranges! A local restaurant here has an expensive motorized sugar cane press and they make fresh sugar cane juice to sweeten drinks. I’ve had it and it is wonderful. It’s essentially like chewing on sugar cane, only the machine does the chewing. Though sugar cane is fiberous, you can’t eat the fiber–what you can get out of the sugar cane is the juice.
Now, you can take that sugar cane juice and remove the water. That is evaporated cane juice. It’s the whole cane juice with nothing added or removed, except the water. It is a powder–not a crystal. If you want to consume it in it’s natural form, as it would be straight from the cane, mix it with water, about a teaspoon in a half a cup of water.
Jumping ahead, the process of refining sugar is one of heating this cane juice until it separates into the pure white sugar crystals and the syrupy sludge of “impurities” (all the nutrients) that we call molasses. By the way, what we call “brown sugar” is refined white sugar with molasses added, not the same as the whole evaporated cane juice.
I suppose evaporated cane juice could be “raw” if it was evaporated at low temperatures, but I don’t think you could get it to crystalize without boiling it, and then it wouldn’t be raw.