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Monday, April 7th, 2008 10:18 am
What's your favorite no-sugar-added active culture yogurt?

Dannon Light & Fit has a bitter taste to it, although that might be just the one flavor I've tried so far. (I also seem to taste bitterness unusually strongly. I can't put broccoli stems in my mouth, and there's no way I'll ever like coffee.) But just about everything else in my local supermarket has so much sugar in it that I might as well eat a candy bar.

Recommendations?

[edit: Wow, you guys are great! I've got a big pile of good ideas already!]
Monday, April 7th, 2008 05:46 pm (UTC)
Wow; you must be even more sensitive to artificial sweeteners than I am. I find the Light&Fit works pretty well when poured over cereal in the morning, particularly with blueberries (so I’m more going for a tart than sweet flavor anyway).
Monday, April 7th, 2008 05:49 pm (UTC)
Light & Fit has artificial sweeteners? That would explain everything!
Monday, April 7th, 2008 05:52 pm (UTC)
You are probably a supertaster like myself. The amount of artificial sweetener that will cause an ordinary person to register sweetness shows up as bitter to a supertaster. I’ve had aspartame-flavored beverages that seemed sweet— but they had much less than you normally get in a Diet Coke. Have you tried the Minute Maid Light Lemonade? I find it actually tastes pretty good.
Monday, April 7th, 2008 05:55 pm (UTC)
Yes, I definitely fit the supertaster pattern. I didn't know artificial sweeteners would do it! No wonder I keep detecting bitterness where it shouldn't be! (I admit I never understood how people could get used to Diet Coke. It didn't occur to me until right this moment that to other people, maybe it's not bitter.)
Monday, April 7th, 2008 05:58 pm (UTC)
The variations in human smell and taste are a lot higher than those in, say, vision; there are plenty of resources for design to deal with colorblindness, but very few cookbooks that acknowledge that some people have a radically different experience of some flavors. Grapefruit is very bitter to me, cantaloupe a mix of sour and bitter, and I can’t even be in the room with cooking broccoli or cauliflower. I keep an eye on molecular gastronomy blogs, but none of them have done serious research into this area.
Monday, April 7th, 2008 06:20 pm (UTC)
I've never been able to bring myself to eat grapefruit. (Lemon, on the other hand, is fine; I adore sour.) And like you, I don't like cantaloupe (though I can eat it) or cauliflower, either.

I'm doomed to eat unhealthy junk food ;-)
Monday, April 7th, 2008 11:25 pm (UTC)
too much artificial sweetener, and i'll get the bitter aftertaste, but it's a bit later. diet coke tastes "really sweet w/o the syrup-y-ness of sugar". (this from the girl that has a poor sense of taste and almost no sense of smell)



Monday, April 7th, 2008 06:01 pm (UTC)
I don't *think* I'm a supertaster... but all artificial sweeteners taste gross to me. It's not even bitter exactly... just WRONG. I don't really know how to explain the wrongness.
Monday, April 7th, 2008 06:26 pm (UTC)
They're nasty. Now I understand a little of why I find them so nasty!

Most artificial and artificially-concentrated smells are WRONG to me, too, and I would describe the WRONG just like you have described artificial sweeteners here. There's a point behind my nose and just under my eyes that aches when I smell most perfumes and stuff. I call this component of scent "the Smell smell", and it's why I am very fond of unscented just-about-everything. Actual flowers, though, and fruit, and eucalyptus trees, and the like, smell lovely to me. See how wordy I am? I can't explain this at all! :-)
Monday, April 7th, 2008 06:49 pm (UTC)
If you are trying to cut down on sugar and don't like the aftertaste of artificial sweetners - try stevia (http://www.stevia.net/index.htm). I know Trader Joe's used to carry a brand of stevia, so you might want to check there first.

The nice thing about stevia is that, even though it is a powder like the artificial sweetners, it is all natural and zero calories. The downside is that, since it doesn't have the bulk of sugar, cooking with it is problematical. I also like the fact that it dissolves in cold drinks (iced tea) much easier than sugar and even artificial sweetners. Although I did try one brand once that used talc or corn starch as a carrier and made the tea cloudy.
Monday, April 7th, 2008 07:06 pm (UTC)
If I find some yogurt sweetened with stevia, I'll give it a shot. Heck, I'd rather not have it sweetened at all -- this whole artificial sweetener thing says a lot about addiction in our culture, I tend to think -- but at least stevia wouldn't be offensive.