A sweet tooth's dream — ice cream that doesn't make you fat. For centuries, this has been an oxymoron, like "dry ice." But in the 21st century, science and marketing have accomplished the impossible. Ice cream without calories (or with very low calorie content) exists. The question is: what do we eat in this case? And is it not more harmful than regular ice cream? Let's figure it out without illusions.
Traditional ice cream contains sugar (calories), milk fat (calories), and also milk solids. To reduce calorie content, manufacturers replace sugar with intense sweeteners (erythritol, stevia, sucralose, monk fruit), and fat with water gels, maltodextrin, or low-calorie vegetable oils. But vegetable oil is also fat. The solution: add food fibers (inulin, polydextrose), which provide a feeling of fullness but are not digested. Also, the "inflation" technology is used: more air — less mass and calories per serving.
The American brand "Halo Top" has been leading the market for several years (about 280 calories per pint — 473 ml, compared to 1000 in regular ice cream). The European "Breyers Delights" (350 calories/pint). Russian manufacturers have caught up: "Philosophy" (180 calories per 100 g). In 2026, products with the "low-calorie" label appeared on stevia and erythritol. Ingredients: milk (skim), protein (milk or soy), prebiotic fibers (inulin from chicory), sweeteners, thickeners (guar gum, tara), natural flavorings. Calorie content — from 60 to 120 calories per 100 g (compared to 200-250 in regular). There are also "almost zero" — about 20 calories per 100 g, but they are more like sorbet (ice).
Pros: reducing calorie content helps in diets, you don't feel deprived. There are no sugar spikes (if natural sweeteners not raising insulin are used). They contain inulin — good for the gut microbiome. Cons: artificial sweeteners (sucralose, acesulfame K) can cause bloating, change the microbiome, and increase appetite in some people. The taste often fails to match regular ice cream: cloying, metallic taste. The texture can be "chalky" or too airy. Some "zero-calorie" ice creams contain sugar alcohols (erythritol, maltitol), which can cause a laxative effect in large quantities. So eating a whole bowl at once is not the best idea.
The problem with "low-calorie" ice cream is that it encourages overeating. People think: "It's dietetic, I can eat the whole pack." And eat 600 calories instead of 400. Studies show that participants who were given "light" ice cream ate 30% more by volume than regular, and ended up with the same number of calories. So if you can control portions, it's better to eat 50 g of real ice cream than 150 g of "dietetic."
It is really possible to make it yourself. Recipe: frozen banana (it gives a creamy texture) + cocoa powder (sugar-free) + almond milk + erythritol or stevia. Blend in a blender until smooth. Freeze. Calorie content: about 100 calories per 100 g. If you add a protein powder (whey or plant-based), you get "fitness ice cream." Another option: freeze coconut milk (fatty, but calorie-rich) — not suitable. So better banana.
Low-calorie ice cream is a good option for diabetics (under a doctor's control), if instead of sugar, stevia or erythritol. For people with lactose intolerance (vegetable ice cream). For those who are losing weight as a one-time treat, not daily food. It is not recommended for pregnant women (sugar substitutes have not been studied). Children under 3 years old should not be given (erythritol may cause gastrointestinal upset, and stevia may affect hormones).
In laboratories, they are developing ice cream with the addition of thermogenic substances (capsaicin from pepper, green tea extract), which are said to make the body spend more energy on digestion than it receives. For now, this is a myth. Also, 3D printing of ice with flavorings — almost without calories, but this is already "flavored ice," not ice cream. But progress does not stand still. Perhaps in 10 years we will be eating full-fat ice cream without calories. For now, it's a compromise.
Calorie-free ice cream is the magic of numbers. It can be part of a healthy diet if consumed wisely. But don't deceive yourself: replacing sugar with chemicals is not a panacea. The real pleasure is in a small portion of real ice cream, eaten in good company. Dietetic ice cream is for days when you simply can't resist sweet things.
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