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I've been drinking these lately. Taste decent. Natural sweetener.View attachment 45426
Stevia is a great sweetener for cold beverages but tends to break down in hot drinks like coffee or hot tea.I've been drinking these lately. Taste decent. Natural sweetener.View attachment 45426
They just started carrying it at market 32 ( formally price chopper)What stores?
-Myth-
I'm in upstate NY . Starting to see it around more.Stevia is a great sweetener for cold beverages but tends to break down in hot drinks like coffee or hot tea.
Don't think these Zevia are in the Northeast yet or not in the supermarkets near me.
Oh OK so maybe a bit longer to reach markets in my state (CT).I'm in upstate NY . Starting to see it around more.
Read the article I posted.
That's why..
I don't drink as much diet soda (big fan of Coke Zero though) as I used to so been drinking flavored seltzer water myself. The jury is still out on artificial sweeteners though.
Exactly, Stevia and Xylitol break down under the high heat of cooking and baking, causing a rather off-flavor.I did..... before commenting..... it's still inferior to Stevia and Xylitol....
What is your performance criterion?
Mine is the least glycemic load - Stevia and Xylitol win by a wide margin here.
Exception is baking - Stevia and Xylitol are fairly useless there.
Exactly, Stevia and Xylitol break down under the high heat of cooking and baking, causing a rather off-flavor.
OK, well, I don't cook. Haven't cooked since the late 80s.
What stores?
-Myth-
Come on now, I have tried it. sprinkled into oatmeal it is fine, yes but baked into cookies the flavor seemed a bit off to me.I've put Stevia in oatmeal cookies and oatmeal..taste just fine. Mindless don't know what the fuck his talkin about as usual.
Come on now, I have tried it. sprinkled into oatmeal it is fine, yes but baked into cookies the flavor seemed a bit off to me.
OK got you, it took some time for me get used to the flavor difference.You're A BIT OFF.
No fucking shit its gonna taste different, it ain't sugar.
Glycemic load doesn't mean shit unless your a fat diabetic. Let me guess you are carb watcher? Haha, whatever..I did..... before commenting..... it's still inferior to Stevia and Xylitol....
What is your performance criterion?
Mine is the least glycemic load - Stevia and Xylitol win by a wide margin here.
Exception is baking - Stevia and Xylitol are fairly useless there.
Wow, thanks for the information and I surely will keep this in mind. I've been using Truvia so now I'm inclined to dump out that very expensive bag of it that I bought a month ago.Glycemic load doesn't mean shit unless your a fat diabetic. Let me guess you are carb watcher? Haha, whatever..
I' would rather use the sugar that has vitamins and fiber in it naturally and that is in the middle range of glycemic index rather than any chemically processed rubbish with a low GI.
A few facts for you.
In grocery stores, we find an entire shelf of “stevia” in the form of processed liquid drops and white powders – all highly refined chemical extractions from the leaves, in the hopes of reducing the aftertaste. The resulting processed sweetener is called myriad confusing names such as stevia, stevia extract, Rebaudioside A, Reb A, steviol glycosides, etc, and is anywhere from 2X to 350X sweeter than sugar, depending on the blend with other fillers. As a high-intensity sweetener, a little goes a long way, therefore it is often pre-measured in packets or mixed with other fillers such as GMO Maltodextrin, GMO corn Erythritol, inulin fiber, or even cane sugar. Processing is done with a variety of chemicals, such as, methanol, arsenic, ethanol, acetone, etc.
The resulting artificial sweetener called “Stevia” is toxic and unhealthy.
Don’t be fooled by the name, that seemingly innocent stevia we find in grocery stores is a chemical concoction just like Splenda and Aspartame. In fact, it’s probable that you’re buying a blend that’s 99.8% Erythritol, a fermented sweetener made from genetically modified corn, with a pinch of refined stevioside powder. Your “Stevia” can be processed, mixed with chemicals, blended in a hundred ways, and still legally be called simply “stevia”. Refined stevioside is sold under countless brand names such as Sun Crystals, SweetLeaf, Truvia, PureVia, Stevia in the Raw, Pyure, and NuStevia to name a few.
Commercial Stevia is bad news.
Stay away from it. That’s Stevioside and Rebaudioside. All “stevia” in grocery stores is processed with toxic chemicals. If you’re still going for the story that stevia is natural and comes from Peru, know that 85% of all stevia comes from China. Even the world’s top stevia marketer, international sugar giant, Cargill, manufacturer of Truvia and PureVia with Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, has all of its stevia produced in China.
Glycemic load doesn't mean shit unless your a fat diabetic. Let me guess you are carb watcher? Haha, whatever..
I' would rather use the sugar that has vitamins and fiber in it naturally and that is in the middle range of glycemic index rather than any chemically processed rubbish with a low GI.
A few facts for you.
In grocery stores, we find an entire shelf of “stevia” in the form of processed liquid drops and white powders – all highly refined chemical extractions from the leaves, in the hopes of reducing the aftertaste. The resulting processed sweetener is called myriad confusing names such as stevia, stevia extract, Rebaudioside A, Reb A, steviol glycosides, etc, and is anywhere from 2X to 350X sweeter than sugar, depending on the blend with other fillers. As a high-intensity sweetener, a little goes a long way, therefore it is often pre-measured in packets or mixed with other fillers such as GMO Maltodextrin, GMO corn Erythritol, inulin fiber, or even cane sugar. Processing is done with a variety of chemicals, such as, methanol, arsenic, ethanol, acetone, etc.
The resulting artificial sweetener called “Stevia” is toxic and unhealthy.
Don’t be fooled by the name, that seemingly innocent stevia we find in grocery stores is a chemical concoction just like Splenda and Aspartame. In fact, it’s probable that you’re buying a blend that’s 99.8% Erythritol, a fermented sweetener made from genetically modified corn, with a pinch of refined stevioside powder. Your “Stevia” can be processed, mixed with chemicals, blended in a hundred ways, and still legally be called simply “stevia”. Refined stevioside is sold under countless brand names such as Sun Crystals, SweetLeaf, Truvia, PureVia, Stevia in the Raw, Pyure, and NuStevia to name a few.
Commercial Stevia is bad news.
Stay away from it. That’s Stevioside and Rebaudioside. All “stevia” in grocery stores is processed with toxic chemicals. If you’re still going for the story that stevia is natural and comes from Peru, know that 85% of all stevia comes from China. Even the world’s top stevia marketer, international sugar giant, Cargill, manufacturer of Truvia and PureVia with Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, has all of its stevia produced in China.
Think that came from some research article...don't remember where though. But to type all that out indeed takes loads of patience and cojones.Patience of a saint typing that out man.
