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​5 low-sugar desserts for diabetes-friendly indulgence​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 24, 2025, 08:00 IST
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5 low-sugar desserts for diabetes-friendly indulgence

Dessert doesn’t have to be the enemy. For anyone living with diabetes or simply watching sugar intake, the idea of a “sweet ending” often feels out of reach. But sweetness exists in more places than white sugar. It’s in dates, berries, toasted nuts, even the natural richness of milk. The trick is balance, using what nature already offers, cutting back on excess, and leaning on flavors that satisfy without overloading. Here are five desserts that prove indulgence can be mindful, measured, and still deeply enjoyable.

2/6

Carrot halwa with almond flour

Few sweets bring a homely feeling, like gajar ka halwa, but sugar usually carries the show. This lighter version finds its sweetness elsewhere. Two cups of grated carrots go into a pan with a spoon of ghee, stirred until the raw bite disappears. Add half a cup of milk, cover, and let it soften down. Then comes the clever swap: two tablespoons of stevia or erythritol in place of sugar, and a quarter cup of almond flour for body. A whisper of cardamom and a scattering of chopped almonds finish it. The result? Familiar warmth, the taste of winter evenings, without the heavy sugar hit.

3/6

Berry and yogurt parfait

The best desserts are often the ones that ask the least of you. Spoon some Greek yogurt into a glass, drop in a handful of berries like strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, whatever’s on hand. They bring brightness, a tangy pop, and none of the sugar overload. For crunch, scatter in walnuts or sunflower seeds, and if you like a softer edge, add the faintest drizzle of honey. Creamy meets sharp, soft meets crisp and it's proof that something so quick can still feel like a treat.

4/6

Coconut and date ladoo

Here, sweetness comes not from sugar, but from fruit. Ten soft dates are blended into a thick paste. In a pan, dry roast a cup of desiccated coconut until it smells nutty. Stir in the date paste with a spoon of ghee, working quickly before it stiffens. Roll into small balls, dust in more coconut, and you have laddoos that are chewy, rich, and just sweet enough. They travel well in a box, last for days, and satisfy cravings without the crash.

5/6

Baked apple with cinnamon

Take an apple, slice off the top, and scoop out the core. Pack the hollow with a few walnuts, a dusting of cinnamon, and just a touch of sugar or stevia. Set it in a small baking dish with a splash of water and bake at 180°C for 20 minutes. What comes out is soft, sweet, and toasty, the kind of dessert that fills the kitchen with warmth. Eat it straight from the dish with a spoonful of plain yogurt. Simple, comforting, a little indulgent – and so good you’ll probably make it again tomorrow.

6/6

Cocoa chia pudding

This one feels like café-style indulgence. Mix a few spoonfuls of chia seeds with almond milk, a bit of cocoa, and a touch of sugar or stevia. Stir it, let it sit for ten minutes, stir again, then pop it in the fridge overnight. By morning, it thickens into a chocolatey pudding. Just before eating, throw on some strawberries or a few roasted almonds. It’s light but filling, sweet without being heavy – the kind of treat that actually makes you feel good.

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Copyright © May 25, 2026, 11.48PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service