Like most people, I LOVE CAKE. I also love keeping fit and being in good shape. Unfortunately cake and fitness do not always go hand in hand. This blog will detail my research into delicious recipes, safe training, nutrition advice, product reviews...well simply anything interesting to do with maintaining a healthy lifestlye, (and any cheats I may find along the way)!

Saturday, 29 October 2011

Not so naughty ... yet still quite nice.


PER CAKE: CALORIES 98kcal, FAT 2.4g, CARBOHYDRATE -15.4g, PROTEIN  4.8g
I do not just want to make a healthy alternative for a cake but an actual healthy cake. I want it to look like cake, smell like cake and taste like cake, but is this even possible? Surely if it was then either a health freak or supermarket brand would have them filling their health food isles. However I am going to give it a very good go.
My first trial I had planned to make three super healthy cupcakes however baking is most definitely experimental science and therefore things do not always go to plan, the following mixture made nine large cupcakes.
In order to decrease the most calorific part of the typical Western cupcake, the fat, I removed butter completely and used a combination of low fat cream cheese, mango puree and natural yoghurt to gain the same consistency. Without fat a cake will become denser, to overcome this I whisked an egg white until stiff before folding into the mixture in an attempt to add air to the cake.
To replace the ‘empty calories’ in huge quantities in most cakes. I replaced the sugar with a small amount of artificial sweetener, but mainly relying on the natural fruit sugars in the strawberries to provide the sweet taste you desire in a good cake.  
The quantities can be decreased or increased in synchronisation to adjust to how many cakes are desired.
INGREDIENTS:
v  90g Wholemeal flour
v  1 tsp Baking powder
v  30g Oats
v  1 Egg white
v  ½ Egg yolk
v  25g Sweetener
v  40 ml Low fat natural yoghurt
v  25g Low fat cream cheese
v  225ml Skimmed milk
v  5g Mango puree
v  160g Strawberries
v  5g white chocolate

METHOD:

1.       Preheat oven to 180o and line a muffin tin with paper cake cases.

2.       Mix the dry ingredients together in a large bowel – wholemeal flour, baking powder, oats and sweetener

3.       Mix the wet ingredients (EXCEPT THE EGG WHITE) in another large bowel ensuring all forms one smooth liquid – egg yolk, low fat natural yoghurt, low fat cream cheese, skimmed milk and mango puree


4.        Mash the strawberries with a fork and heat in a saucepan in order to evaporate some of the water, leave to cool.


5.       Add the wet ingredients and cool strawberry puree to the dry ingredients and combine well.

6.       Whisk the egg white until it forms stiff peaks and fold into the mixture.

7.       Equally distribute the mixture between the cupcake cases, filling each case about two thirds.

8.       Bake in the centre of the oven for 15-20 minutes until golden brown

9.       Remove from oven and uniformly dispense the 5g grated white chocolate on the top of the cakes.

Taste: The cakes tasted fairly sweet but would be better a little sweeter to suit my taste as it was the wholemeal flour that took over the flavour slightly.

Smell: During baking the cakes smelt like traditional Western cakes, both the strawberries and wholemeal flour over ride the cake smell on removal from the oven.

Texture: On the first day of baking the cakes were of a sticky consistency and difficult to remove from the cases in one piece however on days 1,2 and 3 the consistency  improved. They were very airy and not dense despite no fat in the ingredients, the whisked egg white worked well.  

Look: The cakes rose well but due to their low density when the white chocolate shavings were added the weight of them made the cakes sink a little in the middle.


Thumbs up from Finnley

The final test was to see whether my three year old son would eat one of mummy’s new cakes – he did and he loved it, even asking for seconds!

IMPROVEMENTS FOR NEXT TIME:

v  Add more fruit to ensure 1 portion in each cake by experimenting with drying strawberries.
v  Add corn flour to the strawberry puree to thicken up the mixture
v  Try with the addition of a small amount of low fat spread high in mono and poly unsaturated fat.
v  Increase oat contents to increase cholesterol lowering properties
v  Swap low fat yoghurt to yoghurt containing stanols and sterols to increase cholesterol lowering properties

Nutritional analysis
TRIAL ONEUnitsCaloriesProteinFatCarbohydrate
Flour100g3308.91.275.6
90g2978.011.0868.04
Oats100g37511.29.266
30g112.53.362.7619.8
Egg white100g36900
one 36900
Egg yolk100g33916.230.50
half 169.58.115.250
Sweetener100g3801.4093.7
25g950.35023.425
L/F yoghurt100g564.817.4
40ml22.41.920.42.96
L/F Cream cheese100g13214.983.5
25g333.72520.875
Skimmed milk100g323.40.24.4
225ml727.650.459.9
Mango puree100g710.70.116.7
5g3.550.0350.0050.835
Strawberries100g270.80.16
160g43.21.280.169.6
TOTAL984.852.4615

Thursday, 27 October 2011

A Gap in the Market?



They grace the shelves of supermarket aisles, they are temptingly displayed in bakery windows and they are the perfect accompaniment served with a coffee from the local cafe. Cakes, biscuits and pastries are utterly delicious and there is not a person in existence that does not enjoy these sweets treats. However these wonderfully tasting foods are commonly high in fat, sugar and calories, the perfect recipe for obesity, heart disease, stroke and potentially an early death.

The traditional jam and cream layered sponge cake, eaten by the British since the Victorian era contains a colossal 400 calories per 100g and is 28% sugar, 19% fat of which 12% is saturated fat; and considering portion sizes seem to be growing in size on a daily basis, the average serving being offered in well know coffee shops is at least 180g  - just one piece of the moorish delight would be over half of the recommended daily intake for saturated fat and contain more energy than a typical cottage pie. Is it really worth it? Well, judging by the way the British public buy these sugary pleasures it certainly is.

 Nearly every cake and biscuit is high in calories, these calories, otherwise known as energy quickly add up and lead to fast weight gain. It only takes 3,500 calories to increase body weight by an entire pound, so going from beautifully curvy to fat in as quick as six months effortlessly occurs in many individuals. It is the fat in these products that is responsible for the high energy content. In just one gram of fat there are nine calories, with alcohol containing seven calories, and carbohydrates and protein containing less than half that, at just four calories per one gram it is clear to see that these high fat foods are designed for limited intake. It is the high levels of saturated fat in these foods that is the most dangerous, other than being sky-scrapingly high in calories this fat in excess leads to dangerous cholesterol levels putting an individual at risk of heart disease and stroke.

The high sugar values are known as “empty calories” in the health industry; sugar contains calories, four per gram to be precise but has no other nutritional benefits, no vitamins or no minerals. As soon as it is consumed it is quickly absorbed by the gut, dramatically increasing the blood sugar and giving a buzzing, energetic feeling.   However this rise drops just as quickly leading to tiredness and hunger and highly likely feelings to eat more high sugar food to relive the oomph, leading to more unnecessary calorie intake and an increased weight.

A good old fashioned "cake"

So where did these death traps even come from?... Cakes originated from Ancient Egypt where they were bread like consistency, sweetened with honey and filled with dried fruits and nuts. So the earliest cakes were actually a pretty healthy food. Even in Medieval European times cakes were still fruit or spice based and were kept as storage items for winter.  The modern day cake with icing developed mid-17th century when refined sugar was invented and over time refined flour replaced yeast and butter cream replaced the original egg white icing to create the traditional tea time treat. Maybe, with obesity related deaths on the increase it is time to take the cake back to its routes, back to the days of the pyramids?

From my experience as a personal trainer and student dietitian I cannot express hugely enough the mammoth gap in the marketplace for a healthy, bakery like product. To combat sugar cravings by tasting like a naughty indulgence and ease off hunger until dinner time without resulting in a huge energy intake and putting a halt to the diet. Clients and patients alike often remark they need something to replace the mid morning biscuits or after work slice of cake, because as nutritious as the suggested swap to a piece of fruit is, in comparison to a moist chocolate cup cake with perfectly smooth butterscotch icing, it purely does not measure up on taste, texture or that happy fullness feeling. It is simply no surprise that people fall off their healthy diet tracks.

Fancy this...or a banana?


So over the coming months I will use my knowledge as a personal trainer, nutritionist and dietetic student and my taste buds as the owner of a set of very sweet teeth to create a lovable treat that...
·         Is tasty with a luxurious texture and indulgent feeling
·         Contains one portion of fruit
·         Contains calcium
·         Has a beneficial effect on cholesterol levels
·         Is low in calories, fat, saturated fat and refined sugar
... This bakery delight will be as pleasing on the hips as it is on the lips!