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I've never used brown-sugar Twin. I've often wished Splenda would come out

with a brown sugar variation, though. I still don't like eating artificial

sweetners but it beats nothing sweet at all.

sky

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I find the Da Vinci " carmel flavoured " Splenda syrup comes close to the missing

brown sugar taste.

CJ

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Sky:

I think I remember seeing a Splendra brown sugar reciently. Maybe look

at their web site. But Also Krogar, or Super Wal-Mart I believe had

it. Hard to rember now, at 8am and little sleep last night :)

> I've never used brown-sugar Twin. I've often wished Splenda would

come out

> with a brown sugar variation,

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My mother called me one day, saying she thought she'd seen

one. I thought she might have been seeing the Splenda/Sugar

blend... but maybe not, if someone else is thinking they saw it

too. I didn't see anything on their website about it though.

SulaBlue

> > I've never used brown-sugar Twin. I've often wished Splenda

would

> come out

> > with a brown sugar variation,

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Data-Pro wrote:

> I've never used brown-sugar Twin. I've often wished Splenda would come

> out

> with a brown sugar variation, though. I still don't like eating

> artificial

> sweetners but it beats nothing sweet at all.

Whey Low Gold is a good brown sugar substitute, and it isn't artificial

(it has carbs, but is designed not to spike the blood sugar - YMMV).

Brown maltilol is available, as well. Brown Sugar-Twin in the USA is

saccharin and tastes awful; Brown Sugar-Twin in Canada is cyclamates and

tastes better, although still artificial.

Nature's Flavors makes a sugar-free (Splenda) brown sugar syrup that

tastes like the real thing; not every recipe can accomodate the extra

fluid, but I find it's great on roasted squash (small amounts) or for

making baked pears.

You can also make your own brown sugar equivalent by simply adding a

SMALL amount of molasses to whatever sweetener you prefer. 1/4 to 1 tsp

per cup of Splenda or whatever is plenty to give you a deep brown sugar

taste. This works especially well in cookie recipes, where the molasses

can be creamed in with the butter and egg.

--

el (andreafrankel at sbcglobal dot net)

" wake now! Discover that YOU are the song that the morning brings... "

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