Help Mr. Pancreas do his job – try low-sugar cookie-candy

DSCN7568_edited

Nuts and fruit slow down the release of glucose into the blood.

Sugar’s role in our health

Sugar is Will’s favorite food group.

“Maybe you can cut back on the sugary things, once in a while,” Vinny suggests.

“Sugar is in everything!” Will proclaims. “It gives us energy!”

“That’s true,” Vinny agrees. “What I don’t like, though, is when we add sugar to our food, over and above what nature puts there. Have you heard about your pancreas?”

“Pancry-Ass?” Will mimics. “Is it some kind of donkey from the island of Pancry?”

“Your Pancry-Ass, Will, is a hard-working fellow that rides up close to your stomach. He tirelessly churns out enzymes and hormones that digest your food. One of these molecules is insulin.”

Diabetes

“A guy in my class has a gadget that pricks his skin regularly to give him insulin,” said Will. “He has diabetes... ”

“Diabetes is a disease of the pancreas. Some people, like your friend, are born with a lazy pancreas. In these folks, diabetes shows up in childhood. But other people take in so much sugar, the pancreas can’t keep up. It just quits!

Diabetes used to be an old-folks’ disease. Today it’s turning up in teenagers. Without insulin, we have no energy. Without daily medicine, we can’t go on.”

Glucose

“What does insulin have to do with energy?” Will asks. “Sugar is what gives us energy!” Will says with complete assurance.

“You’re right,” agrees Vinny. “All our food is digested into a sugar called glucose, and a bunch of other molecules. Insulin  turns that glucose into energy. It deals with any glucose we don’t need for energy by storing it as fat. Eat too much added sugar on top of the natural sugar in foods, and we get so much glucose in our blood that insulin can’t handle the job.”

sugar in food_edited

Eat what you love. But make sure it loves you back

Some favorite foods quickly break down into glucose in your body. Many of them have no added health benefit. We should save them for special occasions, and eat them with protein or fiber to slow their digestion and prevent sugar spikes. Eat these foods sparingly:

  • Baked goods with added sugar, including cane sugar, brown sugar, maple syrup, honey, agave syrup, and candy
  • Baked goods with refined flour, including white bread, white pasta, cakes, pies, and cookies
  • white rice
  • corn (and, especially, high fructose corn syrup)
  • soft drinks
  • junk food, fast food and most processed foods

Other foods slow down the release of sugar into our blood. They are insulin’s little helpers. At every meal and especially when you choose something from the first list, eat some of these:

  • oats
  • legumes (beans etc.)
  • brown rice
  • millet
  • quinoa
  • chia seeds
  • fruit
  • vegetables
  • nuts
  • protein, like lean meat, lo-fat milk and cheese, and tofu

My little secret: stevia

Too much added sugar, and one day, your pancreas will go on strike!

I love sweets. To keep my pancreas happy, my sweetener is stevia, not sugar.

Stevia is a natural, plant-based no-calorie food, 300 times sweeter than refined sugar. It is so sweet, you only need a tiny bit. There’s a difference in flavor only if you use too much.  Try different brands in various amounts to find the right mix for you.

Here’s Will’s cookie-candy from two posts back using stevia in place of most of the sugar.

DSCN7566_edited

Will’s low-sugar cookie-candy
Makes two sheets of candy cut into 20 squares each

  • 3 ounces (1/2 cup) dark chocolate chips
  • ½  cup butter
  • ½ cup coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 egg (I use omega-3)
  • Stevia, equivalent to 1/3 cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract (I use real)
  • 1 cup flour (I use whole-wheat pastry flour)
  • ½  teaspoon baking powder
  • pinch of salt
  1. Preheat oven to 375F
  2. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper or silpat.
  3. Heat the butter gently in a glass dish in the microwave until it has just melted (about 30 seconds on power level 6). Combine with coconut oil and stir the lumps until they dissolve.
  4. Combine the sugar with the melted butter and stir with  wooden spoon until smooth.
  5. Mix the egg with the vanilla in a small bowl, then stir it into the butter mixture.
  6. Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt in a small bowl, then stir them into the butter mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips.
  7. Drop heaping tablespoonfuls onto the lined cookie sheets, leaving a small space between. These cookies spread, but for cookie candy it’s best when they connect into one huge baked sheet of goodness. Or pour half the batter on each sheet and spread with a spatula into a thin layer.
  8. Using oven gloves, put the baking sheets in the oven and bake for 8-10 minutes, until the dough turns golden brown.
  9. Using oven gloves, remove the sheets from the oven and let the cookie-candy cool. After a minute or two, cut the cookie-candy into squares and let cool completely. Then lift the squares off the sheets and store in an airtight container.

DSCN7565_edited

To sum up

You can use all butter, or all coconut oil, but I prefer half and half. Coconut oil may be healthier, but butter adds a delicious flavor.

Per serving (2 squares from 40 in total): We’ve reduced the sugar from 11 grams to an acceptable 5 grams. We also knocked 24 calories off each serving.

For best health, eat a balanced diet, adjusted to the amount of exercise your family gets, their age and health.

Related

What it’s like to live with diabetes

10 Comments (+add yours?)

  1. M E Cheshier
    Oct 03, 2015 @ 22:18:16

    Reblogged this on Travels with Mary and commented:
    Great post and recipe!

    Reply

    • Vinny Grette
      Oct 03, 2015 @ 23:23:28

      Thanks for the boost, and especially for reblogging my post where you did. I try to tell stories that might interest kids and their families to learn all they can about the food they eat. So any acknowledgement that my stories might help is real encouragement :).

      Reply

      • M E Cheshier
        Oct 03, 2015 @ 23:36:16

        You are most welcome. Yes, I hear ya. I am the same way. The more I educated people on the importance of eating healthy, the better. 🙂

        Reply

  2. M E Cheshier
    Oct 03, 2015 @ 22:17:56

    Great post and recipe! Thanks!

    Reply

  3. Holistic Wayfarer
    Sep 27, 2015 @ 21:00:53

    The brown or green Stevia powder is much better (less processed) than the glycerine. =)

    Reply

    • Vinny Grette
      Sep 27, 2015 @ 22:15:45

      I know what you’re saying. I’m thinking of going back to the pure stevia (not Truvia or Stevia sugar). I think I’m getting some baking reactions from the filler that aren’t optimal. It’s a work in progress! Never a dull moment.

      Reply

  4. chefceaser
    Sep 27, 2015 @ 07:14:17

    Reblogged this on Chef Ceaser.

    Reply

  5. Vinny Grette
    Sep 26, 2015 @ 17:13:04

    Thanks! But let’s remember mangoes are loaded with nutrients, while coke just comes with problems. That’s why we should make sure the foods we love, love us back :). It’s “added” sugar that is the culprit. People who have diabetes, though, have to watch ALL carbs – not fun.

    Reply

  6. sprinkle and a dash
    Sep 26, 2015 @ 15:48:53

    Hi Vinny, I love your chart. Who new a mango had more sugar than a can of coke. Surprise.

    Reply

What's cookin' with you?