THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SUGARS & SWEETENERS (The Experiment, 2014, 280   pages, ISBN 978-1-61519-216-8, $16.95 US paper covers) is by Alan Barclay   (consulting dietician for diabetes), Philippa Sandall (a nutrition editor) and   Claudia Schwide-Slavin (an RD specializing in diabetes education). There are 185   entries, with products from acesulfame potassium to yacon syrup, arranged in   dictionary format with material on history, taste, use, nutrition, and   scientific data for each. There's a primer on using the book and on the Glycemic   Index; as well, there is a discussion on health matters, such as added sugars =   added calories, special diets, and labeling issues. Of great interest is the   chapter on "test kitchen" wherein two recipes are used to substitute a variety   of sugars and sweeteners, with cosmic results: vanilla butter cookie, and   blueberry bran muffin. They use rice syrup, agave nectar, honey,   stevia-erythritol blend, Demerara sugar, coconut sugar, and xylitol. Both the   cookie and the muffin were compared and contrasted with the various sugars as to   taste, texture, appearance, finish, calories. At the end there is an appendix of   brand names of high-intensity, non-nutritive sweeteners. The book will answer   important questions, such as which sweeteners perform well in baking, will the   kids notice if there are sugar substitutes, and which are best for dieting or   blood sugar.
  Audience and level of use: libraries, those looking for sweeteners beyond   sucrose.
  Some interesting or unusual facts: From a taste note on stevia – "then came   the follow-up – a lingering, very sweet, slightly bitter aftertaste on the   tongue and the front palate. You could not really identify the vanilla or butter   flavours – the whole point of making a vanilla butter cookie."
  Quality/Price Rating: 90.
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com   
 
 

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