December 24, 2011
Healthy Bites: Sweets don’t have to be cut from your list
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- There was a time when desserts were on the "never enjoy" list for a large population because of particular medical conditions, allergies and dietary concerns.

Informed thinking, research and development of new products have come a long way. For instance, natural sugar has been shown to not be a totally contributing bugaboo in diabetic diets. It's how often and in what manner and packaging it's consumed.

Sugar is most always in desserts, which contain empty calories and questionable nutrition. But sugar isn't the only food carbohydrate.

And there are still carbs in food made with artificial sweeteners. I've seen carb counts on items made with the sugar substitutes that are only a couple points away from those with standard sugar. If you're an avid label reader, you have seen it for yourself. The more reduced the fat or calories, the higher the carbs and other nutrition numbers go. Eating has become a tradeoff.

Portion size, occasional servings, careful selections and counting of food carbs on the plate better enable fitting a dessert into a meal. Sweets can once more find their way onto a fork or spoon. We don't have to have thrown all the tasteful babies out with the bathwater.

One of today's desserts in this, the second half of my Decadent December chocolate columns, forgoes the cutlery in favor of being handheld. I don't ever remember eating a piece of fudge on a plate with a fork. Do you?

Forks aside, it can be said, though, that most chocoholics could eat a hubcap if it were first dipped in chocolate.

I originally tried the fudge recipe from a potluck church supper cookbook a few years ago as it was written. In that book, it was a highly regarded frosting for a brownie.

However, later on I began seeing recipes that were made from the same ingredients, but labeled "fudge." I wonder which came first -- the frosting or the fudge.

There is still sugar in the milk and the chips aren't sugar-free, but the fat-free property of the milk might help with calories down the line.

I do know that standard, unaltered, regular creamy fudge is on the once-in-a-while list to be eaten. That would be a small square, though, not half the pan. Fudge to me is another way to say "holiday," so that's why the recipe today.

The cheesecake started in Cooking Light magazine. I reduced the sugar and removed the crust, but if you want a crust, use regular or reduced-fat Oreo cookies (the cookie only, discarding the cream center).

Don't bother with mixing crumbs and butter to make the crust; just cover the bottom of your pan with a layer of separated Oreo rounds, cutting additional cookies to fit.

Best wishes and happy chocolate to all for 2012!

Classic Chocolate Fudge

Makes 20 squares.

     1    14-ounce can fat-free sweetened condensed milk

     3    cups dark chocolate chips

     2     teaspoons vanilla

     1/2  cup chopped walnuts (optional)

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