DAILY LIFE SUGAR FREE BRICK CAKE 190G | YOGURT
Daily Life Sugar Free Brick Cake Yogurt is a soft, pre-packaged sponge cake snack designed for reduced-sugar diets. It is part of the “no added sugar” bakery range and is typically consumed as a breakfast cake or convenient snack.
The product features a light, moist sponge with yogurt flavouring, offering a mild creamy taste and soft texture similar to traditional snack cakes. It is sweetened mainly with maltitol and other polyols, allowing sweetness without added sucrose.
It is portioned for convenience and commonly used as an on-the-go snack or controlled-calorie treat in low-sugar eating plans.
Ingredients
Typical manufacturer-declared ingredients for this product include:
Wheat flour
Sweetener: maltitol
Vegetable oils (sunflower oil and/or soybean oil)
Pasteurised eggs
Yogurt powder or fermented milk ingredients (~2–5%)
Humectants: sorbitol, glycerol
Raising agents (e.g., sodium bicarbonate, diphosphates)
Salt
Flavourings
Acidifier (citric acid)
Preservatives (e.g., potassium sorbate, sorbic acid)
Emulsifiers (e.g., mono- and diglycerides of fatty acids)
Allergens: Wheat (gluten), eggs, milk.
Nutritional Information
Per 100g (typical values)
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|
| Energy | ~380–420 kcal |
| Fat | ~18–22 g |
| Saturated Fat | ~3–6 g |
| Carbohydrates | ~55–60 g |
| Sugars | 0–2 g (naturally occurring only) |
| Protein | ~5–6 g |
| Salt | ~0.2–0.4 g |
(FAQs)
1. Does it contain sugar?
No added sugar is used. Sweetness comes mainly from maltitol and other sugar alcohols.
2. What does “no added sugar” mean here?
It means no sucrose or table sugar is added, but small natural sugars may still be present from milk or yogurt ingredients.
3. What gives it the yogurt flavour?
The flavour comes from yogurt powder or fermented milk derivatives combined with flavourings.
4. Is it suitable for diabetics?
It is often used in low-sugar diets, but due to maltitol content, portion control is still important and medical advice is recommended.
5. Can it cause digestive discomfort?
Yes. Excess consumption of polyols like maltitol or sorbitol may cause bloating or laxative effects.
6. Is it a diet product?
It is marketed as a reduced-sugar bakery snack, not a medical diet food.
7. When is it usually eaten?
Commonly consumed as a breakfast snack, coffee break cake, or portable sweet snack.