I keep seeing around the board that cream cheese is induction friendly, but all the cream cheeses I have looked at have sugar in them. I really want to try some of the recipes that involve cream cheese, but I'm skeptical about it at this point. Since it has sugar, why is it induction friendly? I can't find any that don't have sugar. What am I missing?
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Re: Cream Cheese
Read the labels to see if they have "added" sugar, that is sugar listed in the ingredients.
I don't eat cream cheese frequently, but Philadelphia Brand has the least number of carbs.
~Megs~
242/141/160 (130)
dress size 26/10/8
5'4", Female, May 2, 2003
My blog:
http://mformiscellaneous.blogspot.com/
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Re: Cream Cheese
I use Philadelphia to but I limit it. I don't even have an ounce a day. I just looked at the ingredients and I think it might be considered okay because the sugar doesn't come from refined sugars/syrups that end in "ose" Those are the bad ones.
Ingredients: PASTEURIZED NONFAT MILK AND MILKFAT, CHEESE CULTURE, SALT, STABILIZERS (XANTHAN AND/OR CAROB BEAN AND/OR GUAR GUMS).
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Re: Cream Cheese
Just to add - in UK some of the supermarkets have 'own brand' cream cheese that has half the carbs of Philly.
I buy Waitrose fullfat cream cheese which has 2 carbs per 100 grams (3.5 ounces) - though for induction remember to count one carb for every ounce of cheese, no matter if it has less than one carb per ounce.Wondering how to get 'most' of your net carbs from your induction veggies?
Take a look at the thread from the latest Veggie Challenge to see how others manage it!
Check out our Low Carb Recipes website and add to it!!

F/60 yrs/5ft 5.5" (Though due to collapsing vertebrae I am now only 5'3" - but I refuse to recalculate my BMI
)
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