19 September, 2017
Raspberry Protein Balls
Comments : 2 Posted in : #healthymumma, Breakfast, C4K Bariatric Kitchen, Desserts, Diabetic Friendly, Egg Free, Gluten Free, High Protein, Protein Balls/Discs/Bars, Refined Sugar Free, Snack: Sweet on by : C4Kkitchen
Raspberry Protein Balls
Makes: 18
Ingredients:
- 1 1/2 cup frozen raspberries
- 4 scoops (120g) vanilla protein powder
- 1 cup natural almonds
- 1 cup shredded coconut
- 1/2 cup coconut flour
- 1 tablespoon maple syrup
- 1/2 cup rolled oats
- Up to 1/4 cup water
Method:
- Place the frozen raspberries, protein powder, almonds, shredded coconut and coconut flour into a food processor and process until you have a fine meal texture
- Add in the maple syrup and pulse the food processor until well combined
- Add in the rolled oats and pulse to roughly chop but to retain some texture (should you prefer to have the oats ground to a mill add at the first step)
- Gradually at water 1/2 tablespoon at a time until the mixture comes together to form a rollable dough
- Roll the ball into even size balls slightly smaller than a golf ball, approximately 40g each.
Nutritional Value per Ball:
- Calories: 118
- Total fat: 6.2g
- Total carbohydrates: 7.7g
- Sugars: 1.9g
- Protein: 8.3g
Recipe Notes:
- Store in an air tight container in the fridge for a maximum of 7 days
- This recipe is freezer friendly to be consumed within 6 months
- Protein powder used in the recipe is Protein Supplies Australia WPI Vanilla Fast Release protein powder
- You can buy online from www.proteinsuppliesaustralia.com.au
- Use the Discount code psafriendsofhollys at checkout to get a 10% discount
Disclaimer: C4K Kitchen does not hold any responsibility for the consumer using this recipe including the storage guidelines and time frames recommended in the recipe notes. The consumer holds all responsibilities to ensure that food hygiene and safety standards are adhered to.
2 thoughts
Hi Holly. What could I use instead of coconut flour? And what measurement??
Coconut flour has very unique properties and it often hard to do a straight substitution for. You could grind your own coconut in a food processor to make coconut flour