Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Kiwi Fruit : Facts, Nutrition plus a Recipe for a Low Carb Kiwi Fruit and Blackberry Cake


The brown and hairy exterior of this egg-shaped fruit doesn't look promising, but inside it's a different story - sweet, yielding, bright green flesh, prettily dotted with black seeds.

The flavour is distinctive but hard to pin down - some say it's like strawberry, others say pineapple. Its named after the bird of the same name from Zealand, where it's also grown, though its other name, Chinese gooseberry, reflects its original country of origin.

Very high in vitamin C, kiwi fruit is far better eaten raw - cooking it destroys the vitamin content and the green colour. The enzymes it contains makes it good for tenderising meat, but they'll also cause milk to curdle and will prevent gelatine and aspic from setting, so don't attempt kiwi ice cream or jelly.

Availability
All year round.
Choose the best
Go for firm fruit that gives slightly when gently squeezed. Avoid wrinkled and bruised fruit.
Prepare it
Peel off the skin with a knife or vegetable peeler, then chop or slice. Alternatively, to eat it as a snack, cut in half and scoop out the flesh with a teaspoon.
Store it
If ripe, keep in the fridge - they'll last around at week. If under-ripe, keep at room temperature.




Back in 2011 Eddie wrote "Check out the nutrients in a kiwi fruit. OK at around 10 carbs per 100 grams it’s a bit carby. When you consider the average Kiwi fruit weighs around 70 grams, half is only around 3.5 carbs. Thinly slice and serve with some double cream, great grub and very high in vitamin C."

Kiwi Fruit and Blackberry Clotted Cream Cake
Low In Carbs



Ingredients
100 grams of ground almonds
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 large eggs
1 tablespoon of melted butter
2 tablespoons of double (heavy) cream
One Kiwi fruit
100 grams of blackberries
125 grams of clotted cream

Method
Mix all dry ingredients in a bowl.
Melt the butter in a Pyrex jug/dish, add the eggs, cream.
Add the dry ingredients and mix.
Pour mix into a 6" x 3" micro-wave safe glass dish.
Microwave in a 700watt for 4 minutes.
Allow to cool and cut in half.
Spread on extra thick clotted cream add the sliced kiwi fruit.
Place top on cake and cover with clotted cream and add the blackberries.
Tastes fantastic serves six.

A variety of recipe ideas/articles are found within this blog, not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter. If you have any concerns about your health, it is always advisable to consult your doctor or health care team.

All the best Jan

33 comments:

  1. The best way to eat kiwis is to cut them in half and scoop out the flesh with a spoon, not a knife. This trick is unknown to many people.

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  2. ...I've only had kiwis a few times.

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  3. Me gusta el kiwi. Te mando un beso.

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  4. My very all-time favorite fruit ever.

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  5. We grow a lot of kiwis in my area!
    They are a very tasty and healthy fruit
    ! I love them, thanks for the presentation/reminder Jean!

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  6. I love kiwi! Recently I went to NZ and there I had kiwi chutney...it was so yum. Kiwi flesh mixed in with minced garlic, salt etc.

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  7. Looks very nice. My husband is eating quite a few kiwi fruit this winter...a golden one.

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  8. Kiwi is delicious. My eldest daughter is allergic to it, unfortunately, so we never have any in the house if she's with us.

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  9. I eat mine like a boiled egg, cut off the top and eat with a teaspoon. I know someone who eats it whole!!! I remember seeing them for the first time as a child, very expensive and called Chinese Gooseberries. Have you tried the Golden Kiwi?

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  10. This was such an informative and delicious read! I loved learning about the health benefits of kiwi fruit—especially how rich it is in Vitamin C and fiber. The low-carb kiwi and blackberry cake recipe was a great surprise. It’s rare to find desserts that are both healthy and genuinely tempting. Can’t wait to try it out at home. Thank you for combining nutrition facts with a creative recipe!

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  11. I like kiwi, I just do not have them often.
    Take care, have a great day!

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  12. Kiwi is a favourite of ours.

    God bless.

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  13. We enjoy kiwi, but for some reason, we don't eat them much. Maybe I should correct that. The cake looks so delicious!

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  14. I love kiwi. I first had it in Japan in 1979. A year later it came to the States and at that time it was very expensive!

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  15. I like that fruit. Unfortunately there isn't a great production of Kiwi in my country, and most of them are shipped from other continents.

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  16. I do not care for kiwi. I wonder if I tried one fresh.. not shipped across the miles if I would like it better.

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  17. Hardly ever find Kiwi here. The cake looks soooo good.

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  18. REPLY TO
    Rustic Pumpkin who in her comment above asked ...
    Have you tried the Golden Kiwi?

    Hello there and the short answer is no I haven't!
    I did a read up about them and apparently they are usually sweeter that the green ones I referred to in the post.
    The article is here:-
    https://www.tastingtable.com/942804/green-vs-gold-kiwi-whats-the-difference/

    Keep on enjoying kiwi :)

    All the best Jan

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  19. By coincidence I was just thinking that it had been a while since I last bought a kiwi. I suppose because right now different local fruits abound.

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  20. I love kiwi- but I haven't had any this summer. Thanks for the reminder! Sounds yummy. :)

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  21. I have only had a kiwi a couple times, this dessert looks interesting

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  22. I just think they're pretty! Sweet and lovely is a bonus!

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  23. I have always like kiwis. The cake looks good :-D

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  24. I love the green colour of kiwi interiors, but I think I'm mildly allergic to the fruit as my tongue tingles magnificently when I eat them. So I don't.

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  25. Me encantan. Antes los tenĂ­a plantados, pero ya no. Besos.

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  26. Sounds worth trying dear Jan
    How amazing it’s available for whole year wow

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The lowcarb team value your comments. Thank you for taking the time to contribute to our blog. Please note! negative comments and insults from anonymous idiots, with nothing to add to the debate will not be authorised. However, we welcome constructive criticism.

The best of health to you and yours.

Eddie