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Taste Test: Mott's Plus Sauce

three varieties of Mott's Plus applesauce
I do not like the flavor of sweetened applesauce. I didn't like it when I was a kid and I sure don't like it now. I feel like adding sugar to something that is naturally so sweet and flavorful mutes the delicate flavors and makes it bland and flat. You might think I'm being a little overdramatic here, but I take my applesauce very seriously. In my family, we like to make our own, peeling and coring large mounds of handpicked apples and simmering the fruit down in a large pot with cinnamon, nutmeg, lemon zest and a hint of ginger. There were always quart sized bags full of frozen applesauce in the freezers of my childhood refrigerators.

So I was relieved to discover that the new line of Mott's Plus Sauce, designed as a way to give active folks an additional way to bring calcium, fiber and antioxidents into their diet, is unsweetened. As I tasted my way through the packets, I liked the Pomegranate flavor the best, as it was tangy and smooth, without being cloying or overly processed. I had a harder time with the Cranberry Raspberry, mostly because you couldn't detect the extra fiber in it at all and I kept wondering if it was really there. Essentially, my brain got in the way of my enjoyment. The Harvest Apple tasted just like the unsweetened applesauce that my grandmother kept around when I was a kid -- smooth, gentle and terrific with cottage cheese.

Michael Pollan tells us not to eat foods with health claims on them, and while it's true that simply eating an apple is the best way to go, this new line of applesauce from Mott's is tasty, free from nasty additives and so is probably fairly inoccuous.

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Filed under: Raves & Reviews, Ingredients, New Products

Snapple launches white teas

Snapple is launching a line of new white teas, due to hit shelves during the summer. White teas are made with young tea leaves and are high in antioxidants. They are known for their light, delicate flavor, which Snapple has blended with fruit flavors, including apple, nectarine and raspberry. The company plans to market the beverages, which will be sampled in stores nationwide, for its health benefits and all natural ingredients, as well as the facts that white teas are naturally decaffeinated and the drink has 30% fewer calories than other Snapple teas, though it is still sweetened with real sugar, not artificial sweeteners.

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Filed under: Drink Recipes, New Products

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