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Bigstockphoto.com/Young woman eating delicious macaroon on white background

Is your day not complete without dessert? Are you the one person at the table who does want to see the dessert menu, when everyone else (cowards) shakes their heads, pats their full tummies and says, “I couldn’t possibly?” Do you believe a host who doesn’t serve dessert at her dinner party is a bad host? I feel you. I also feel the extra pant size I carry because of my love of dessert. If you aren’t willing to give up the literal maraschino cherry on top of your day, you can at least find ways to make your sweet dishes healthier. By adding fiber to a dish, you make that food more filling, so you won’t need as many bites before you feel satisfied. Here are easy, smart ways to add fiber to your dessert (so you can feel less bad about it).

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Cereal with your ice cream

If you’re an ice cream fiend, instead of adding sugary granola to your sundaes, add high-fiber cereal like Muesli (it also has dried fruit for more fiber) or grape-nuts.

 

 

 

 

Bigstockphoto.com/Fruit and berry crumble cake with oat and wholemeal topping

Eat crumbles instead of pie

Pie contains a lot of crust, which has empty calories and fiber-less flour. Make crumbles instead of pie, and use whole oats. You only need a little bit of the crumble to add texture and sweetness.

 

 

 

 

Bigstockphoto.com/White plate full of delicious raw protein balls. Healthy sweets for sport people. Homemade dessert. Raw sweets made of nuts coconut dates and cacao

Try coconut-covered date balls

Dates have a lot of fiber (12 grams in just one cup), and there are endless ways to use them in dessert. One simple way is to mash them up, roll them into balls, and cover them in coconut shreds (also high in fiber).