🌟 Elevate Your Everyday with Wyman's Wild Blueberry Powder!
Wyman's Wild Blueberry Powder is a nutrient-dense, 100% wild blueberry product with no added sugar, designed to enhance your diet with powerful antioxidants. Each resealable 8oz pouch contains the equivalent of nearly 1 cup of whole blueberries, making it a convenient and delicious addition to your daily nutrition.
A**A
Great Flavor and Health Boost!
I’ve been using both Wyman’s frozen wild blueberries and their Wild Blueberry Powder in my smoothies, and the combination is fantastic! The powder adds so much more flavor and richness to the already delicious frozen berries. Plus, it boosts the nutritional value with extra antioxidants. I love that both products are made with 100% wild blueberries and have no added sugar. It’s the perfect addition to my smoothies, and I’ll definitely keep using this brand as long as they sell it. Highly recommend for anyone looking to enhance both the taste and health benefits of their smoothies!
T**S
Depends on what you mix it with
Wyman's is a very reputable company and I bought this brand because 1. Medical Medium has raved about the benefits of consuming wild blueberries and/or using blueberry powder if you cannot find wild blueberries in your local store's frozen section; and 2. I have read that you want to try to find wild blueberries produced in Maine or Canada. I'm not new to Wyman's. I have eaten their frozen wild blueberries as a dessert with whipped cream (did this a lot during covid) - - great for the immune system! This 8 oz. resealable bag is packed FULL and for what I use it for, it will last a long time (serving is 2 tsp. and I use just 1). I already have my own concoction I drink every morning with cranberry juice, lemon juice and apple cider vinegar with water, but I thought why not add 1 teaspoon of the blueberry powder in with it to make it that much more powerful. ** It does not fully dissolve in liquids like water or juice.** If you plan to drink it like that, then be prepared for a lot of grit, which is unavoidable in the process of making the powder (skin & seeds). Looking into the bag, you can't really tell at first, it just looks like all powder. I thought I would provide photos so you can get an idea. I put ONE teaspoon in a few ounces of purified water and mixed the heck out of it with a mini mixer, then poured it through a fine strainer. A lot of grit in the strainer! It still looked like dark 100% blueberry juice in the glass afterward. Even strained, there is some residue at the bottom of the glass. I can deal with a little, so I'll be preparing it this way. Now, if you plan to bake with it and use it in smoothies or yogurt, then this shouldn't be so bad. If grit really bothers you, then I suggest trying the Wyman's wild blueberry juice in the bottles ($$$ = expensive). With all that said, it tastes great added to my little concoction and I feel like it will give me the boost I need everyday.
D**S
Wyman's Blueberry Powder.
It is an excellent product, true taste, dissolves quickly, last for months on the shelf. It is becoming too expensive for my budget but it is delicious and a great antioxidant.
S**T
Clean convenient source of nutrition and antioxidents
I've been using this for about three years and find the smoothie I use it in consistently gives me sustained energy. It tastes good, though I don't eat it alone. It's a good sourceof nutrition and antioxidents.
A**2
Not as Sweet as Expected - Where are the Missing Grams of Carbs if This is the Whole Blueberry?
Help me with my math! The product literature states that 2 tsp of powder is about equivalent to one cup of wild blueberries.Okay! So I measured out 2 teaspoons and put it in a drink. It was oddly non-sweet. I don't actually have taste loss, so what was up? I checked the bag's nutrition label and was bewildered to see that 2 tsp of powder has only 4 grams of carbohydrates.Because I knew one cup of frozen wild blueberries by the same company has 19 grams of carbs. I knew the frozen berries tasted sweet because I buy them too. In fact 1/4 cup of the frozen were more sweet to me than 2 teaspoons of the powder which should equal a cup's worth of frozen!So where did the missing carbs go? Why is one fresh cup's worth of dry powder not as sweet as the frozen? Are they using unripe blueberries or something like that? Or does the drying process somehow remove carbohydrates? Do frozen blueberries lose most of their volume when frozen or something and maybe it's not fair to compare the volume of frozen with fresh? (I tend to doubt that.) Are they juicing the blueberries first? Is the carb count inaccurate? Are all the sugars falling to the bottom of the bag of powder? I have no idea what the situation is, no idea why it wasn't as sweet, and no clue why the discrepancy is there as well.In any case, I like the convenience of the powder and I don't mind its being somewhat sludgy when mixed in a drink. I'm just concerned about the sweetness puzzle. I had been going to try to reconstitute this and use it for blueberry cobbler in a pinch but now I'm thinking it's not really suitable for that.
J**D
phenomenal product
I use this product a lot for my drinks that are for heavy medal detox for the Medical Medium way of eating and this makes it so much easier . It does not take up as much space it does not need to be put in the freezer to take up space in there. This product also makes it easier to do the drinks to stay consistent and the price is great for the size
S**O
Very convenient. Good value
Easy to use pouch. Excellent quality
R**N
Woman’s wild blueberry powder
This is my first time using the blueberry powder and I was pleasantly surprised how good it was in my smoothie. I would buy again.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago