T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3057.1 | More Info | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | i'd rather be shopping | Fri May 24 1991 15:45 | 7 |
| Oh, I forgot to mention:
Or....does anyone have a recipe for some? I would gladly make it for
him!
Jackie
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3057.2 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Fri May 24 1991 16:12 | 7 |
| RE: .0
Chocolate derives its flavor and texture to a large extent from cocoa butter, so
low-fat real chocolate is a contradiction in terms. There ain't no such beast.
Remove the fat from chocolate and you have cocoa powder.
--PSW
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3057.3 | suggestions for survival | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri May 24 1991 16:26 | 10 |
| It isn't perfect, but have your father try the non-fat chocolate frozen
yoghurt floating around these days. It is really a pretty good chocolate
fix and won't hurt his diet...provided he eats ONE scoop a day. You can
also make some very nice chocolate meringue cookies (no fat in them, lots
of cocoa powder and some sugar) - recipes are in lots of cookbooks. These
are really quite wonderful and can be made quite pretty with a pastry tube.
They are made of stiffly beaten egg whites, a pinch of salt (optional, but
a very little pinch is all that is required), cocoa powder, and superfine
sugar (to the British, castor sugar).
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3057.4 | | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | rash: quasi-mottle | Fri May 24 1991 18:08 | 3 |
| Also, Entennmen's (sp) now has fat-free, no cholesterol
desserts. The chocolate loaf cake is especially yummy :-)
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3057.5 | | SQM::WARRINER | The buck starts here | Sun May 26 1991 01:27 | 25 |
| Compound chocolate substitutes the cocoa butter with some form of oil.
This will probably have less cholesterol than regular chocolate, and
isn't *too* gross.
If your father likes chocolate "things" (cakes, brownies, etc.) you
can help solve the problem by substituting the chocolate with the
following formula:
1 oz chocolate ~= 1 TBL cocoa powder + 3 TBL margerine.
Mind you that this sort of substitution works with any form of oil, so
technically you could make your own pseudo-chololate. The only problem
is that this concoction is pretty gross. Where it does work well is
when it is part of another recipe, so the substitution of the cocoa
butter is diluted by the other ingredients and isn't noticed as much (and
sometimes not at all).
If I were in his position, I would wean myself off of pure chocolate
and onto cakes, where I could moderate the cholesterol content. In
lieu of that I would just eat the highest quality choclate I could find
in smaller quantities.
Hope this helps,
David
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3057.6 | | OASS::AMATO_A | | Mon May 27 1991 17:33 | 11 |
| Jackie,
Try some of the high end health food stores around, they are usually
ahead of the regular stores in finding fat free products and being smaller
they are more likely to order things for you if they don't stock them.
Good luck to you and your dad,
Angela
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3057.7 | | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | i'd rather be shopping | Tue May 28 1991 11:34 | 18 |
| Thanks for all of your replies. I only wish I could come up with a
recipe to make milk chocolate!
We have tried the Enteman's no fat chocolate cake and it was marvelous!
We really liked it with Vanilla "Simplese" frozen yogurt.
But, alas, nothing takes the place of milk chocolate!
He is doing really well and sticking to his diet, so until we can come
up with a recipe or something, he has one of those bite size Hershey or
Nestle chocolate bars!
Keep me in mind if you hear of anything!
Thanks!
Jackie
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3057.8 | Carob? | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Tue May 28 1991 15:49 | 5 |
| What about carob-flavored imitation chocolate? Try your local health
food store.
And then tell us about it!!
-Dotti.
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3057.9 | carob - bleech! | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue May 28 1991 16:23 | 6 |
| > What about carob-flavored imitation chocolate? Try your local health
> food store.
> And then tell us about it!!
I tried it.....it may be something, but IT AIN'T CHOCOLATE...it won't make
a chocolate lover happy.
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3057.10 | Yogurt cheese chocolate? | FLUKES::SUTTON | He roams the seas in freedom... | Wed May 29 1991 05:23 | 12 |
| Although I haven't tried this (and so can't attest to how close it
is to chocolate), here's one I heard of:
Make a batch of yogurt cheese from plain, non-fat yogurt, sweeten
with something like Equal or Sweet-N-Low (I use one packet to 8 oz
of cheese), and mix in enough cocoa powder (the stuff you bake
with) to get the right color/chocolate flavor.
Roll into little balls and chill well.
(This came from Jeff Smith (The Frugal Gourmet))
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3057.11 | | SQM::WARRINER | The buck starts here | Thu May 30 1991 15:33 | 14 |
| RE: Carob
Carob will substitute the cocoa solid part of chocolate, but this is
not the part with the cholesterol, so it detracts from the taste
without doing any good. If you were trying to avoid caffiene, this
would be a good solution, but not for cholesterol.
See if you can find out what kind of oil they put into compound
chocolate and if it has cholesterol in it (this may entail writing
to the manufacterer).
Carob tastes okay, but it won't satisfy any real chocolate cravings.
-d
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3057.12 | | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Fri May 31 1991 10:29 | 13 |
| There usually isn't much animal fat in chocolate. However, there is quite
frequently lots of saturated fats, like cocoa butter, palm oil, coconut oil,
etc., which are just as bad for someone trying to lower the fat and cholesterol
content of their diet.
So, asking for just cholesterol content of the chocolates can be misleading. If
you are going to the trouble of contacting a company to find out the info, ask
about total fat content and saturated fats as well.
The sad news as PSW said is that low fat chocolate (as in chocolate bars, etc)
is a contradiction in terms. His best bet would be to go with the low fat
chocoloate flavored stuff for the every day eating, and save the best chocolate
he can find for an occasional treat.
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3057.13 | mock-milk chocolate... | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Tue Jun 18 1991 08:32 | 31 |
|
I just found and bought a wierd cookbook at the New England [un]Mobil
Bookfair called "Bum Steers" which has a recipe which might help.
I have not tested it, but it sounds interesting.
================================================================
Mock-Milk Chocolates
3 cups water
1/2 cup honey
2 cups raw sugar
1 lb skinned chestnuts
1. Put water in heavy saucepan and disolve sugar and honey in
it over very low heat. When all sugar has disolved and liguid becomes
syrup-like, add chestnuts.
2. Put an asbestos [???} pad under pan and cook steadily for 45-60
mins over gentle heat, turning chestnuts over now and then til glazed
and chewy. Server or save in fluted foil candy cups.
=================================================================
According to a table in the back of the book, dried chestnuts have
5.9% water, 10.7% protein, 74.2% carbohydrates, 7% fat, and 2.2%
minerals. Doesn't say what kind of fat, but the recipe should be
very low fat.
If you try it, I'd like to hear the results...
/alan
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