Recipe for Sugar Substitutes 
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Instructions: I love Sucanat, Fruitsource and Maple Syrup Granules which are all dry sweeteners that sub near perfectly for granulated refined white sugar. They are all found in HFSs and co-ops,
but not all stores carry them. Often stores are more than happy to special
order, or once they know of an interest, to start stocking it regularly.

Here are some definitions:
SUCANAT: evaporated whole cane juice...about the same color as brown sugar,
but opaque instead of shiny, tastes richer...as far as I know, nothing is refined out of the cane juice, so it retains the maximum amount of the nutritional of the whole food, short of eating the cane itself. Use like amounts when substituting for either refined brown or white sugars. Runs about $2 a pound or slightly more.

FRUITSOURCE: A dry sweetener, kinda yellowish white, made from evaporated rice syrup and white grape juice. This is the hardest of the three to find,
but it does substitute well for white refined sugar, especially when color is important. It has a slightly fruity taste, so may altar the taste of the
end product somewhat. I usually dont use straight Fruitsource, but use it
half and half with another sweetener, usually Sucanat.

MAPLE SYRUP GRANULES: evaporated maple syrup....really wonderful, really expensive. A rich-tasting, granulated dry sweetener. Use in like amounts when substituting for either refined brown or white sugars. The last time I
bought some, it was over $8 a pound, but it is a tad more wonderful than Sucanat.

I almost forgot....DATE SUGAR....easier to find, pretty spendy, though.

Made of ground up dates. Have been told in some recipes it should be dissolved in liquid first, though Ive never found it necessary to do that.

The only reason I dont use date sugar much is because Sucanat is so much cheaper. I think I paid somewhere in the neighborhood of $5 per pound for date sugar last time I bought some.

I like to use
*raw* honey too, but use half as much as you would the dry white stuff and you need to tinker with the dry/wet ingredients to compensate. ONe cookbook I use gives thes rules:

For every 1 cup white refined sugar, substitute 1/2 cup raw honey; decrease
liquid in the recipe by 1/4 c.; if there is no liquid to reduce, add 3-4 T.
FLOUR per half cup honey used. Also, decrease oven temp by 25 degrees, because goods containing honey brown faster than goods baked with refined sugars.

Goods sweetened with honey tend to keep a lot longer than goods sweetened with sucrose.

You have to be willing to experiment with honey. Sometimes the honey taste
is overpowering and you have to get used to it. It seemed almost unpleasant
at first, when I first started using it, but now I like it. There are many
different kinds of honey, some are milder tasting than others. I tend to buy whatever is cheapest (I get it in bulk at my co-op, and there is usually
two to choose from, and it is always changing) In some recipes the texture
is altered a lot, in others not much. When making quick breads, I have found that wet sweeteners never work out right, so I use Sucanat and Fruitsource exclusively in quick breads.

Also, unless the recipe is coming from a health-conscious source, most recipes call for way more sweetener than is necessary, so cutting back is a
good idea and the recipe may not suffer at all-just use a little less liquid to compensate for the reduction in dry ingredients. When tinkering with recipes, always take notes...dont be tempted to think youll remember
exactly what you did.

Brown rice syrup, barley malt syrup, maple syrup, and blackstrap molasses also work well in things like cookies (not cakes or quick breads, though!).
Again, just add slightly less liquid to the recipe or slightly increase the
dry ingredients. I dont think these sweeteners are as sweet as honey, though, so you may want to use 2/3 to 3/4 of the amount of white or brown refined sugar called for in the recipe. I also routinely use wet sweeteners
in recipes that call for just a tad of sweetener...like spaghetti sauce or yeast breads.

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