Zero calories / zero glycemic index
safe for diabetics, keto, weight-loss seekers.
High-Quality, Naturally Extracted, Reb-A Stevia Leaf Extract
Looking for the best stevia sweetener? MonkVee’s Pure Stevia Leaf Extract is 100% filler-free, smooth, and with no bitter aftertaste. Keto-friendly, diabetic-safe, and plant-based.
safe for diabetics, keto, weight-loss seekers.
Say goodbye to added sugar and lab-made artificial sweeteners.
No bitter aftertaste
Our products are high quality and 100% natural with no sneaky fillers or preservatives.
Our customers keep coming back for more. Why count calories when you can just ditch them!
MonkVee is founded by a type 1 diabetic and registered dietitian.
MonkVee sweeteners can be used in anything! See our recipe library for inspiration.
100% satisfaction guarantee or your money back, no questions asked
Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana) is a leafy green plant native to South America, traditionally used by the Guaraní people for centuries to sweeten teas and medicines. Its sweetness comes from natural compounds called steviol glycosides, which are 200–300 times sweeter than sugar yet contain zero calories and have no impact on blood glucose. Unlike many stevia products on the market, MonkVee’s Pure Stevia Sweetener is 100% pure—free from erythritol, maltodextrin, or other fillers. Even better, it delivers clean, smooth sweetness without the bitter aftertaste often associated with stevia. Highly concentrated, just a tiny scoop is all you need to sweeten coffee, tea, smoothies, or light desserts. We’ve included a microscoop in every jar to make measuring easy. Welcome to sweetness, simplified.
Sugar tastes good—but it comes at a high metabolic cost. Each spoonful of sugar causes a spike in blood glucose and insulin, triggering exhaustion, hunger, and more sugar cravings. Over time, this fuel‐and‐crash cycle contributes to weight gain, insulin resistance, Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and chronic inflammation. According to the CDC, Americans eat an average of ~17 teaspoons of added sugar daily—almost 57 pounds per person each year.
Stevia helps break that cycle. Its sweetness comes from steviol glycosides—natural plant compounds that are 300 times sweeter than sugar but have zero calories and zero impact on blood glucose or insulin (NCBI – Review). This makes stevia one of the most reliable sweeteners for people managing diabetes, prediabetes, or following keto and low-carb diets.
Beyond being sugar-free, stevia brings potential health advantages:
While some studies hint at blood pressure support or enhanced glucose regulation, most of this work is preliminary, conducted in vitro or in animals—not yet in robust human trials (ScienceDirect – 2025 Review, Wikipedia).
In lab tests, fermented stevia extracts have even shown selective cytotoxicity against pancreatic cancer cells—but this is very early research, and findings haven’t been confirmed in humans (The Sun, NY Post).
Added sugar is in everything. It is difficult to escape it. MonkVee makes it easier.
Stevia (Stevia rebaudiana) is a leafy green plant native to South America, where it has been used for centuries by the Guaraní people to sweeten teas and traditional medicines. The sweetness of stevia comes from natural compounds called steviol glycosides. These compounds are 200–300 times sweeter than sugar, yet they contain zero calories and do not affect blood sugar or insulin levels.
Because of its intensity, less is more:
👉 For baking recipes that require volume and structure (cookies, breads, cakes), stevia alone isn’t enough—you’ll get the best results by pairing it with a bulking agent or one of our blends.
- Coffee, tea, and espresso drinks
- Smoothies, protein shakes, and green juices
- Lemonade, flavored water, or cocktails
- Cheesecakes and custards (where structure comes from cream/eggs, not sugar)
- Puddings, mousses, and panna cotta
- Whipped cream, frostings, and glazes
- Yogurt, chia pudding, or overnight oats
- Sauces and marinades (teriyaki, barbecue, stir-fry glazes)
- Salad dressings and vinaigrettes
- Hot cereals (like oatmeal, cream of rice, quinoa porridge)
- Cottage cheese or ricotta snacksFat bombs (nut butter, coconut oil, or cream cheese based)
- Protein bars or energy bites
- Homemade sugar-free chocolates or truffles
Quitting or reducing sugar may be the single most powerful dietary change you can make. The average American consumes 77 grams of added sugar daily, while the American Heart Association recommends no more than 25 grams for women and 36 grams for men. That means most people are consuming two to three times the safe limit.
The dangers of excess sugar:
The demand for stevia has skyrocketed, but not all products are created equal. Many brands use “stevia” as a marketing buzzword, only to dilute it with cheap fillers like maltodextrin or dextrose—which can spike blood sugar almost as much as table sugar. Others add unnecessary “natural flavors” or artificial ingredients that take away from stevia’s natural benefits.
Harvesting and Drying
Water Extraction
Filtration
Purification
Crystallization or Drying
Spray-dried into a fine white powder, or dissolved in water to create a liquid stevia solution.
Blending (for consumer products)
Yes, partially.
Raw stevia leaves contain not only sweet steviol glycosides but also flavonoids, chlorophyll, polyphenols, and trace nutrients. Some research has shown whole-leaf extracts may have antioxidant and potential anti-cancer properties because of those additional compounds.
During purification, most of those non-sweet compounds are intentionally removed to improve taste (and meet food-safety regulations). The resulting high-purity stevia extract (95%+ steviol glycosides) contains almost none of the “extra” phytochemicals — it’s mostly just the sweet molecules.
So while purified stevia is safe and intensely sweet, it doesn’t deliver the same spectrum of compounds as whole-leaf stevia. That said, the research on anti-cancer benefits is still early and mostly lab-based, so it’s not yet considered a “nutraceutical” in practice.
Yes, it is still “natural extraction” by food-science standards.
Here’s why:
The extraction starts with water infusion (tea-like).
The purification uses physical and natural processing steps: filtration, ion-exchange resins, and sometimes crystallization. No synthetic chemical modifications are done to the steviol glycosides themselves — the molecules remain exactly as they occur in the plant. Food regulators like the FDA, EFSA, and JECFA recognize this as a natural extraction and purification process, not a synthetic one. What’s not considered “natural” is chemically altering stevia (like enzymatically modifying it into “Reb M” via fermentation with yeast or GMO enzymes). That’s closer to a bioengineered sweetener, even though it’s marketed as stevia.
The stevia leaf naturally contains over 40 steviol glycosides (the compounds responsible for sweetness).
The big ones are:
Most stevia on the market historically has been Reb A–based.
Manufacturers extract and purify Reb A from the leaf because it’s present in much higher quantities.
These products are labeled “stevia leaf extract” (95%+ glycosides, often Reb A).
Because Reb M tastes much closer to sugar (less bitterness), companies wanted more of it. But since it’s rare in the leaf, they produce it via fermentation or enzymatic conversion:
Fermentation method: Using genetically engineered yeast, corn, or other microbes to produce Reb M in vats. Enzymatic conversion method: Starting with common stevia glycosides (like Reb A) and chemically/enzymatically modifying them into Reb M.
These Reb M products are marketed as “stevia” even though they’re technically fermentation- or lab-derived, not directly from the leaf.
Stevia leaf harvest & drying – The Stevia rebaudiana leaves are harvested and dried.
Water extraction – Leaves are soaked in warm water (like making tea), which pulls out all the steviol glycosides, including stevioside, Reb A, Reb B, Reb M (tiny amounts), etc.
Filtration – Plant matter is removed, leaving a crude extract that contains a mix of sweet and bitter glycosides.
Purification – Through methods like ion-exchange resins, activated carbon, or crystallization, specific glycosides are separated. This is where Rebaudioside A (Reb A) is isolated and concentrated, because it has the best balance of sweetness and taste. Drying / crystallization – Reb A is crystallized into a white powder, which is 95–98% pure steviol glycosides, usually labeled “stevia leaf extract." Since Reb A is already present in the stevia leaf and the process is: Physical extraction (water, filtration, crystallization) No synthetic chemical modification to the molecule itself …it is considered a natural extraction process (similar to extracting caffeine from coffee or vanilla from vanilla beans).
Scarcity in the leaf: Reb M is present in tiny amounts (<0.1% of the leaf). You’d need enormous fields of stevia to yield meaningful quantities which is totally impractical.
Taste advantage: Reb M tastes much closer to sugar than Reb A: less bitterness, faster onset and quicker fade (no lingering aftertaste).
Economics: Since the leaf can’t supply enough Reb M, food companies (Cargill, Coca-Cola, etc.) turned to fermentation or enzymatic bio-conversion:
Fermentation: genetically engineered yeast or corn microbes produce Reb M in fermentation tanks. Enzymatic conversion: Reb A or stevioside from the leaf are chemically/enzymatically altered into Reb M. This makes Reb M commercially viable at scale, but means that most Reb M on the market is bioengineered, not directly from the leaf.
Look at the ingredient label
If it says “stevia leaf extract” → usually Reb A, extracted naturally.
If it says “stevia sweetener,” “steviol glycosides,” “Reb M,” or just “stevia” without “leaf” → it’s often fermentation- or enzymatically produced Reb M.
Some companies intentionally avoid the phrase “leaf extract” to cover the fact it’s lab-made.
Cargill & DSM (Avansya): make a fermentation-based Reb M called EverSweet.
PureCircle (now Ingredion): makes “next-gen” stevia glycosides via enzymatic conversion.
Amyris (until recently): made Reb M from engineered yeast.
If a brand sources from these suppliers, it’s almost certainly using bioengineered Reb M.
Coca-Cola partnered with Cargill years ago to develop Truvia, which was originally Reb A–based.
Then they moved toward Reb M because it tastes more like sugar.
Their newer “Coca-Cola Life” and “reduced sugar” products have been reformulated using EverSweet Reb M (fermentation).
Coca-Cola and Cargill have openly promoted this in press releases as a “more sugar-like stevia.”
Not all Stevia is created equal. There is a major difference between Reb A and Reb M. Reb M is the GMO version used in CocaCola products and Reb A is the naturally extracted version used by MonkVee. Although MonkVee's Pure Stevia Leaf Extract does have slightly less aftertaste (also it depends on how the product is used - oversweetening will create more bitterness), our stevia is Reb A and of the highest quality.
Ditching the sugar was never THIS easy!
Cuts empty calories without losing satiety. Linked to reduced visceral fat (Harvard study). Prevents sugar spikes & crashes that fuel hunger
Prevents insulin spikes & crashes. Improves insulin sensitivity. Lowers Type 2 diabetes risk.
High sugar doubles risk of heart mortality. Improves cholesterol & lipid profiles. Reduces fatty liver risk.
Eliminates sugar highs and crashes. Reduces brain fog. Linked to lower rates of mood disorders
Reduces stress hormone imbalance. Improves hunger/satiety regulation. Supports women with PCOS (insulin-driven).
Lowers acne-causing inflammation. Prevents glycation (wrinkles, collagen damage). Reduces water retention & bloating. Sugar feeds cavity-causing bacteria. Cutting sugar reduces decay & gum disease.
Sugar weakens immune response. Cutting sugar reduces harmful bacteria & candida. Lowers risk of major chronic diseases. Linked to greater life expectancy.
High sugar impairs memory & focus. Alzheimer’s risk tied to “Type 3 diabetes” effect. Improves overall vitality & daily health. Lower risk of cognitive decline with reduced sugar intake
MonkVee Natural's
Welcome to the Sweet Life.
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