
Holiday Sweets
made with natural sweeteners
The holiday treats listed here are all sweetened with agave nectar, barley malt syrup,
brown rice syrup, date sugar, evaporated cane juice, fruit spreads, honey, or maple syrup.
And if you don't find what you are looking for here, I've got almost more than 200 additional recipes for cakes and frostings, chocolates, custards, fruit desserts, ice creams, pastries, puddings, quick breads, sauces, and more at SweetSavvy.com.
Candy & Confections
Chocolate Coated Almonds
Chocolate Truffles
English Toffee
Magic Disappearing Chocolate Fudge
Nut Butter Confections
Pecan Pralines
Sugarplums
Apple Cranberry Fruit Leather
Cookies
Fig Swirls
French Chestnut Biscotti
Easy Coconut "Snowball" Cookies
Thumbprint Cookies
Wheat-free, Dairy-Free Almond Butter Cookies
Cranberry Orange Almond Crumble Cookies
Magic Cookie Bars (Seven-Layer Cookie Bars)
Poinsettia Filled Cookies
Sara's Mother's Lebkuchen
Shortbread Yule Bannock
Shortbread Butter Cookies
"Sugar" Cookies for Cutouts
Chocolate Cookies for Cutouts
Sweet Potato Spice Cookies
Pecan Sandies
"Mince Pie" Filled Cookies
Chez Panisse Gingersnaps
Gingerbread Cookies
Chocolate Chip Cookies
Peanut Butter & Honey Cookies
Maple Cookies
Brownies with Cream Cheese Swirl
Almond Wholefood Cookies
Light and Crunchy Oatmeal Cookies
Dark and Soft Honey Oatmeal Cookies
Oatmeal Date Bars
Filled Cookies
Almond-Raspberry Rice Bars
Nuts
"Sugared" Nuts
Quick Sweet 'n Salty Nuts
Peanut Brittle
Pies
Pumpkin Custard and Pie
Pumpkin Nut Crumble
Pecan Pie
Mince Pie
Cheesecake
Pumpkin Cheesecake with Gingerbread Cookie Crust
Pomegranate No-Bake Cheesecake
Pudding
Figgy Pudding and Plum Pudding
Christmas Cranberry Cremes
Fruitcake
Holiday Fruitcake
Beverages
Eggnog
Hot Chocolate
Spiced Cider or Honeybush Tea
Condiments
Cranberry Sauce and Fresh Cranberry Relish (almost a dozen cooked and raw)
BROWSE MORE RECIPES AT SWEETSAVVY.COM
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Hailed as "The Queen of Green" by the New York Times, Debra Lynn Dadd has been a pioneering consumer advocate since 1982, specializing in products and lifestyle choices that are safer for human health and the environment. She is the author of Home Safe Home.
Why "Sweet Savvy"?
As a verb, savvy means to know or understand.
It comes from the Latin sapere, which is to be wise.
Another word that comes from this root is sage. One of its definitions is "proceeding from or characterized by wisdom, prudence, and good judgment" as in "sage advice".
As a noun or adjective, savvy is practical know-how.
Savvy is what this website is all about: gaining practical know-how about sweeteners of all kinds, so you can make sweet choices proceeding from wisdom and good judgement... which results in good health.
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