Seniors Recipe Ideas: 3 Ways to Make Holiday Sweets Healthier

 

Every year, we have requests for senior recipe ideas that make holiday treats healthier without sacrificing their festive flavors.

Sweet treats aren’t exactly known for being nutritious. Most are packed full of sugar, saturated fat and calories. Fortunately, many senior recipes can be modified to be healthier, without sacrificing flavor. Your food service staff will love using our dietician-approved tips to make healthy holiday treats to tempt your seniors’ taste buds.

holiday desserts

Senior Recipe Ideas Using Sugar Substitutes in Holiday Treats

Holiday desserts can easily be made healthier, but they still need that familiar sweet flavor. For that, you would typically use sugar.

In many of your senior recipes, you may be able to substitute honey, maple syrup, molasses, agave nectar or turbinado sugar for the granulated sugar. Those options aren’t significantly healthier, but their stronger flavor means you can use less to produce the same flavorful results.

You can also reduce the amount of sugar that your recipes call for. With many desserts, seniors won’t notice if you use ¾ of a cup instead of a full cup of sugar – and, you may even be able to cut the sugar down to ½ cup without any noticeable taste difference.

Replace Saturated Fat in Senior Recipes for Holiday Sweets

Fat-free desserts don’t typically offer a satisfying flavor or texture on the palate, so you may not want to go that route in revising your recipes for senior residents. But, you can definitely trim some of the fat in your holiday sweets without taking away the flavor.

With baked goods, you can try exchanging half of the oil or butter for unsweetened applesauce, mashed banana or another type of fruit puree. Your brownies, cakes and cookies will still be moist, tender and delicious, but they’ll be lower in fat.

If you have holiday dessert recipes that call for full-fat dairy, you can exchange it for a lower fat alternative. Choose low-fat milk instead, or replace dairy milk with almond or soy milk, and you’ll reduce or eliminate the saturated fat in senior recipes.

Reduce White Flour in Senior Recipes

Enriched white flour – a major ingredient in many holiday dessert recipes – has very few vitamins and minerals. Replacing it with whole-grain flour can make sweets much healthier for your assisted living or nursing home menus.

Although whole wheat is the most popular, many different types of healthy flour are available. Replacing white flour with the wheat variety gives your dessert treats a boost of nutrients and heart-healthy fiber.

However, because whole wheat flour is coarser and can change the texture of your holiday sweets, it’s best to replace only a portion of the white flour called for. Start with a fifty-fifty mix of each type, and gradually increase the amount of wheat until you reach the right balance. Or, you may want to try white whole wheat flour, as it has a milder taste and lighter texture.

If you would like to improve the nutritional value of your residents’ meals without sacrificing flavor, consider the dietician-approved recipes for seniors included in the Grove Menus program. With the ability to plan nursing home and assisted living menus well in advance, you can reduce food costs and the labor required for preparation and service. Contact us today to learn how Grove Menus can help you improve senior recipe food service quality and flavor with while dramatically cutting your budget.