Sally K. Norton

Vitality Coach, Speaker & Health Consultant

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October 19, 2015 by Sally K Norton

Creamy Fruit Gummies

Commercial gummies are bright colors, these are not, because of the cream and pale fruits.  This is a fruit concentrate food; it is NOT low sugar or low carb.  Gelatin and cream lower the glycemic effect, but always be mindful of portions when treating yourself to sweets. You can make this in two stages, making the cooked fruit puree in advance. Makes 2.5 cups = 20 servings.

Creamy Fruit Gummies

  • Servings: 20 (2.5 cups)
  • Time: 2 hours (1½ - 2 hours for making the cooked fruit purée
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Print

Ingredients

3 cups mango or pineapple chunks (or combination), to make 1 cup fruit purée (see instructions)
⅓ C lemon juice (use lime juice if using pineapple)
1 Tbsp. raw honey
4 drops stevia or 2 Tbsp. dextrose
½ C unflavored gelatin (Great Lakes Unflavored Gelatin is from grassfed cows)
1 C heavy cream or coconut milk

Instructions

To make the fruit purée, cook 3 cups fruit in a sauce pan over low heat, stirring frequently, until reduced by half (the cooking will take at least an hour).  Run fruit through a food mill. Yields 1 cup purée.  You can make the purée ahead of time and refrigerate it.

Combine all ingredients except gelatin and heavy cream in a saucepan over medium heat.

Heat until warmed through, but not hot. Add gelatin and use a whisk or an immersion blender to thoroughly combine fruit and gelatin.

Remove from heat, and add the heavy cream.

Pour mixture into silicone candy molds or an 8×8-inch glass baking dish. Cover tightly and freeze 15-20 minutes on a level surface in the freezer, until the gelatin is set but not frozen.

Remove pan or molds from freezer and push the gummies out of the molds.  If using a baking dish, use a spatula to gently loosen the edges and part of the bottom of the gelatin from the sides of the dish. Gently turn it upside down onto a cutting board and let the gelatin fall out. Use a large knife to cut it into squares or strips. Refrigerate any leftovers in a covered glass container.

December 19, 2014 by Sally K Norton

Sugar

Sugar, Sugar Everywhere
Tis the season for hooking you on sugar.
Getter hyper-jazzed on sugar is optional.

Christmas is a holiday about new beginnings and the magic and wonder of ordinary life. Intentionally placed at the winter solstice, Christmas, like the solstice marks the end of the ever shortening days. Finally, the days are getting longer again. Still it is the dark time, and a time to cheer each other. So, off we go retail treasure-hunting and stuffing ourselves with sugar. We are easy prey for merchants of all stripes who coat the checkout with sugar in its many forms seductively dressed in both nostalgia and novelty. Peppermint bark, and other “sugarplums” so everywhere, so obtainable, promise to fulfill longings you didn’t know you had. 

Do you resist? Are you successfully avoiding candy, cookies, and the like? If so, does it leave you feeling left out?

Want a simple treat without damaging your health in the process?
Try ultra humble and easy baked apples (see post with recipe)

Tip: good food tastes best when you are hungry. Brain-numbing sugars, on the other hand, excite the senses even when you are full and over-fed. This turns “food” into an addictive substance from which you have no natural defenses. You need a plan for maintaining your sanity, waist-line, and good sense.

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