Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (2024)

Jump to recipe

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (1)

Here is my take on homemade Mounds bars — or Bounty if you live outside of US. These beauties are double-coated with crunchy melt-in-your-mouthdark chocolate, they are vegan, low-carb, sugar-free, paleo, so extremely easy and healthy! You don’t even need molds for making these bars.

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (2)

Tips for making the bars

Don’t worry about complicated instructions for tempering chocolate. If you follow the directions above, you actually do the tempering. Quickly and without any thermometers or other hassle! This short-cut tempering should be sufficient for personal use.

Tempering brings several benefits. Chocolate won’t melt in your hands when you eat the bar — it will melt in your mouth instead. Tempering also ensures the delicious sounding and feeling crunch when you take a bite of the bar. Whenever I make something chocolate-coated, that crunch is the most important thing to me. Last but not least,tempering also ensures even colorand shiny surface. But like I said, don’t worry about any complicated methods, just follow the simple directions above.

At least for me, the single best piece of advice what comes to tempering the chocolate, is to avoid heating the chocolate too much. If the chocolate is too hot, the texture will be uneven and burned after the chocolate has set.If the tempering fails anyway for some reason and the color of the chocolate coating is uneven, don’t worry, the bars are still delicious! And the uneven surface actually looks decorated and fun 🙂

Dipping the bars in chocolate is done easiest by holding a bar with two forks while dipping it in the melted chocolate. The excess chocolate will run between the tines.

In case you don’t have time for dipping the bars two times, one time is better than nothing, of course. Simply omit the steps 12 and 13 from the abovedirections. Yes, and you need altogether only 4 oz (115 g) dark chocolate. Alternatively, you can melt 6 oz (170 g) of the chopped chocolate, take the melted chocolate from the heat and add the rest of the chopped chocolate (2 oz = 60 g). Stir until all the chocolate is melted. You can dip the bars once and drizzle the rest of the chocolate over the bars. That’s faster than dipping the bars two times.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a medium saucepan, combine the coconut oil, coconut milk and the sweetener.
  2. Heat over very low heat, constantly mixing until the coconut oil has melted.
  3. Add the shredded coconut and mix until well mixed.
  4. Pour the mixture in a 9 X 5 inch (23 X 13 cm) silicone loaf pan. Press the mixture tightly and evenly to the bottom of the pan.
  5. Refrigerate for 3 hours or until the mixture is solid.
  6. Turn the pan upside down, gently press the bottom of the pan so that the solid mixture pops out.
  7. Cut the mixture into bars.
  8. Chop the chocolate into small pieces, equal in size.
  9. Melt 3 oz (85 g) of the chopped chocolate for example in a water bath or in a double boiler. Don’t let the chocolate get too hot, heat it gently just until it is melted, stirring every now and then.
  10. Remove the melted chocolate from the heat. Add 1 oz (30 g) chopped chocolate to the melted chocolate and mix every now and then to get a smooth mixture.
  11. Dip the bars in the melted chocolate, put on parchment paper or on cooling rack and let the chocolate set.
  12. When the chocolate coating is completely set, melt 3 oz (85 g) of the chopped chocolate for example in a water bath or in a double boiler. Don’t let the chocolate get too hot, heat it gently just until it is melted, stirring every now and then.
  13. Remove the chocolate from the heat. Add the rest of the chopped chocolate (1 oz = 30 g) to the melted chocolate and mix every now and then to get a smooth mixture.
  14. Dip the bars second time in the melted chocolate, put on parchment paper or on cooling rack and let the chocolate set.

Tags

©2024 Images, text and recipe fully copyrighted by Low-Carb, So Simple

https://www.lowcarbsosimple.com/homemade-sugar-free-mounds-bars-bounty/

NutritioninformationProteinFatNet carbskcal
In total:33.1 g252.9 g51.4 g2623 kcal
Per bar if 8 bars in total:4.1 g31.6 g6.4 g328 kcal
Per bar if 12 bars in total:2.8 g21.1 g4.3 g219 kcal
Per bar if 16 bars in total:2.1 g15.8 g3.2 g164 kcal
Per bar if 20 bars in total:1.7 g12.6 g2.6 g131 kcal
Per bar if 24 bars in total:1.4 g10.5 g2.1 g109 kcal

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (4)

My experiences when developing the recipe

I made some experiments with homemade Mounds bars a few years ago. I have a Swedish low-carb cookbook which I don’t consider that great, except what comes to the recipe for Mounds bars — or Bounty, as the brand is in Sweden. The recipe calls among others for erythritol crystals and heavy cream. I wanted to make a dairy-free version, actually completely vegan version. So, I decided to use only coconut milk. I also wanted to use powdered sweetener instead of crystals, because it was important to me to ensure that the sweetener dissolves in the mixture and doesn’t feel gritty or crystallized. And naturally, I persisted in keeping the recipe as simple as possible.

Basically, I started the developing of my homemade Mounds bars from the scratch. I was wondering the amounts of ingredients and just decided to start my research by wildly trying out something. I took a saucepan and combined 1/3 cup (80 ml) coconut oil, 1/3 cup (80 ml) coconut milk and 1/3 cup (80 ml) Zsweet sweetener. I heated the mixture until the coconut oil had melted. Then I added 1 1/2 cup (360 ml) shredded coconut and mixed well. I refrigerated the mixture for a couple of hours, after which I grabbed small handfuls of the mixture and formed bars. Then I dipped the bars in melted dark chocolate and refrigerated them until they were firm and the chocolate had set. The bars were delicious, but they could have been sweeter.Well, my husband and my toddler loved the bars and the batch was soon eaten up.

I still wanted to try out different measures.I increased the amount of sweetener and the shredded coconut. Well, in the end less shredded coconut was better. I tried different ratios of coconut oil and coconut milk, but the original amounts brought the best results.

Then it suddenly hit me that forming bars with hands was actually really laborious. I wanted to simplify the process. I lined a small ceramic baking dish with plastic foil and poured the mixture in there. I pressed the mixture evenly and tightly, covered the dish and refrigerated it for overnight. On the next day I took the dish, took a sharp knife and cut the solid mixture into nice, even bars. All the bars still needed was the chocolate coating. I dipped the bars once in the melted chocolate.

Ceramic baking dish, however, wasn’t the best dish for the bars. I couldn’t remove the mixture or the plastic foil easily, so I had to do the cutting when the mixture was still in the dish because I simply couldn’t get it out otherwise. I switched to a silicone loaf pan and that worked perfectly. Removing the mixture was easy as pie — I just turned the pan upside down and the chilled, solid mixture popped outonto parchment paper where I cut the mixture into bars.

As an extreme chocolate lover, I decided to add another coating of chocolate for the final touch. Yum!

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (5)

Tips for variations

Well, the Mounds bar is the Mounds bar, how would you vary the recipe except to Mounds Island Orange bar? Then add grated zest (with no white pith!)of 1 large organic orange to the mixture of the coconut oil, coconut milk and the sweetener. Add2 teaspoonsorange flavorto the melted chocolate before coating the bars with it.

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (6)

Another delicious variation is to add 1 tablespoon organic cocoa powderfora real coconutty chocolatey treat.

1 teaspoon organic vanilla extractgives a delicious hint of vanilla flavor.

For an easy-to-eat and the cutest treat, make the bars as pops!

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (7)

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (8)

I’m so thrilled about the coming St. Patrick’s Day, so I made a variation with 1 teaspoon spirulina powder in the filling. What an exciting surprise! No artificial colors needed, the spirulina does the job.

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (9)

You can pour the coconut mixture in shamrock lollipop molds, refrigerate for a few hours, remove the lollipops and then dip them in melted chocolate.

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (10)

Well, I’m planning more exciting recipes for St. Paddy’s… Stay tuned!

Update March 5th, 2013:Tip for the pops, how to make pretty round shapes: Instead of rolling the mixture into balls (which results easily to rough round shapesand grainysurface), you can scoop the molten coconut mixture into half sphere moldand press tight into the mold.Freeze for 1–2 hours. Remove the solid mixture from the mold. Glue two half spheres together with melted chocolate. Insert a small lollipop stick or a co*cktail stick to the ball. Dip the ball in melted chocolate. Decorate,if you like.

I used this method for the pops, see the photos above.

Update March 12th, 2017: This recipe is still one of my favorites! This time, I used heavy cream instead of coconut milk. Works well, the result is delicious! Photo below.

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (11)

Related posts:

Chocolatey Strawberry Pops (Vegan)The Ultimate Dairy-Free Sugar-Free White ChocolateHot Drinks for the Holidays — Part I — Hot Cardamom Chocolate (Vegan)Pumpkin White Chocolate Truffles

Homemade Sugar-Free Mounds Bars - Bounty (Vegan) - Low-Carb, So Simple! -- Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free Recipes with 5 Ingredients or Less (2024)

FAQs

What is the main ingredient in a Mounds candy bar? ›

How is MOUNDS Candy made? At the center of each MOUNDS bar is shredded, sweetened coconut, which is then covered with dark chocolate candy.

What is the history of the Mounds candy bar? ›

The MOUNDS Candy Bar story starts in 1919 when Peter Halajian sold his homemade sweets door-to-door. During WWII, a shortage of coconut and sugar caused Peter to discontinue other products to focus on MOUNDS Candy Bars. MOUNDS and ALMOND JOY Candy Bars joined The Hershey Company family in 1988.

What candy was invented in 1948? ›

1948 – Almond Joy.

While its partner candy bar Mounds has been around for almost a century, Almond Joy didn't join the game until a little later.

Does Hershey own Mounds? ›

Following its acquisition of Mounds and Almond Joy in 1988, The Hershey Company continued to manufacture Mounds and Almond Joy at the Peter Paul plant, before moving the manufacturing operation to a more modern plant in Stuarts Draft, Virginia, in 2007.

What is the oldest candy bar still made today? ›

Fry & Sons and currently manufactured by Cadbury. Launched in 1866—nineteen years after Fry's created the first moulded, solid chocolate eating bar (in 1847)— Fry's Chocolate Cream is the first mass-produced chocolate bar and is the world's oldest chocolate bar brand.

What is the oldest candy bar invented? ›

The chocolate cream bar created by Joseph Fry in 1866 is the oldest candy bar in the world. Although Fry was the first to start pressing chocolate into bar molds in 1847,the chocolate creame was the first mass produced and widely available candy bar.

What is the difference between bounty and Mounds? ›

Mounds bars are coated in dark chocolate, and unlike the intentionally-poured drips of chocolate found on the surface of a Bounty bar, Mounds' chocolate shells are comparatively flat. A Mounds bar, however, has an edge when it comes to history: Mounds was the first coconut-filled chocolate bar to be sold.

Is a Mounds bar the same as bounty? ›

Bounty bars are similar to Hershey's Mounds because they both have a coconut filling with a chocolate cover. Unlike Mounds, Bounty comes in both milk chocolate and dark chocolate. Mars no longer sells the coconut bar in the United States.

What is the base ingredients of candy? ›

Sugar, mainly sucrose from sugar beets or sugarcane, is the major constituent of most candies. Other sweeteners employed in candy manufacture include corn syrup, corn sugar, honey, molasses, maple sugar, and noncaloric sweeteners. Sweeteners may be used in dry or liquid form.

Are Mounds candy bars good for you? ›

Mounds dark chocolate coconut bars contain some healthy ingredients like dark chocolate, which has antioxidants, but they also contain sugar and saturated fat. Enjoying them in moderation can be part of a balanced diet, but they're not necessarily a health food.

Is a Mounds bar like a bounty? ›

Bounty is a coconut-filled, chocolate-enrobed candy bar manufactured by Mars, Incorporated, introduced in 1951 in the United Kingdom and Canada. It is a direct emulation of the Mounds bar introduced by Peter Paul in 1936, and also copies the milk chocolate enrobing of Hershey's Almond Joy, introduced in 1948.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kieth Sipes

Last Updated:

Views: 6210

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kieth Sipes

Birthday: 2001-04-14

Address: Suite 492 62479 Champlin Loop, South Catrice, MS 57271

Phone: +9663362133320

Job: District Sales Analyst

Hobby: Digital arts, Dance, Ghost hunting, Worldbuilding, Kayaking, Table tennis, 3D printing

Introduction: My name is Kieth Sipes, I am a zany, rich, courageous, powerful, faithful, jolly, excited person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.