I made this to show you that you can certainly still enjoy peanut butter. Many of you think you must never have it again on a low oxalate diet. Most of you can safely eat 100 mg/ox per day so you can definitely have these as a satisfying treat if you like. If peanut butter is a trigger food for you, meaning once you taste it you cannot limit it, then use sunbutter instead. It is lower oxalate. You can sub out the honey for sugar-free maple syrup if you like to cut down on the added sugar. This pairs nicely with a nondairy or dairy calcium-based product to help with oxalate absorption! Portion not perfection is the name of this game. Enjoy!
PrintKidney Stone Safe Energy Balls
- Prep Time: 10 min
- Cook Time: 0 min
- Total Time: 10 minutes
Ingredients
- 1.5 cup of Old fashioned oats
- 2 tbsp Lilly’s stevia baking semi sweet chocolate chips
- 1 tbsp honey
- 1 cup of peanut butter
Instructions
- In a large bowl mix all the ingredients together.
- Roll into bite-size balls.
- Put in pan and place in fridge to set.
- They keep nicely in freezer and I like to put them there as I think about them less and therefore eat less!
Notes
Oxalate: 14mg/Energy Ball Added Sugar: 1g Calcium: 9mg
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 1 Energy Ball
- Calories: 199
- Sugar: 2g
- Sodium: 36mg
- Fat: 12g
- Saturated Fat: 3g
- Unsaturated Fat: 0g
- Trans Fat: 0g
- Carbohydrates: 17g
- Fiber: 4g
- Protein: 7g
- Cholesterol: 1mg
Leave a Reply