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- Type of diabetes
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Your points are a massive area which highlights both issues in the one size fits all SAD diet and the nuances within lower carb eating. Realistically I think these areas can only be guided like the current status quo which is to do a broad brush e.g. all burger chains do fries, which is a big assumption that the majority of "regular" eaters would have fries. I am pitching at the average Josephine / Jo who is not interested in RCT's, arguments and counter arguments, internet forums, but for whatever reason wishes to eat lower carb, so would like the easiest route to identify menu options with minimal fuss.One difficulty which I picked up from a review of low carb/high fat diet vs low fat diets is low carb/high fat diet can have different definitions: such as <120 g carbs per day vs say, < 40g carbs per day. I stick at present nearer the 100 g carbs /day.
But any banding together to form say, a low carb/high fat coalition, needs to account for possible differences of benefit vs little benefit within those gradations. nbci.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5959976/
Add to that that I have not seen any factoring in of the difference in gut biome between individuals and groups of individuals on various diets. As basic research of non-diabetic individuals has shown BSL responses to various foods varies greatly depending on gut biome.wis-wander.weisman.ac.il/../life-sciences/blood-sugar-levels-response-foods-are-highly-individual?
I am intolerant to cow's milk protein so whilst I can order a cappuccino with soy, at a Xmas luncheon I have to pick out the cheese and tend to avoid the bread - unless someone has gone to the trouble and expense to use goat's cheese or buffalo mozzarella. And I am a little dismayed at the so-called advantages of vegan diets as one risks developing vitamin B 12 deficiency over time un less the vegan includes a pharmaceutical sources of B12 in is/her diet..
Until the research is clearer and more data is available any coalition of diets for diabetes management may not be on firm enough footing - just my thoughts - as the current research talks about the reported difficulty of staying on low carb/high fat diets for long periods of time and that weight loss by any diet is the common denominator in any successful diet for diabetes.
Please do not shoot the messenger - I am still trying to find clear research results from DDM's low carb high fat program for example, beyond the rhetoric.
Below is my high level attempt to guide using real world places my family and I have eaten at recently. The controls (my thoughts) are that the swaps should be within the currently offered food choices, and that butter or other non vegetable oils should come at a premium. The establishment where necessary can uplift the price of the meal; so for example if a standard meal of steak, mushrooms and mashed potato was changed to steak, mushrooms and butter mashed celeriac, this may justifiably but not deemed like for like profit wise and should be reflected in the price, and or if more work is required to deliver the non-standard dish (however I would put a case that if an item is already on the menu, is there a problem).
My Guidance Thoughts:
Protein
The protein should be cooked in either unsalted butter, olive oil, ghee, lard, etc or by other methods such as baking or grilling that does not involve vegetable oil. No sauces or rubs should contain sugar or grain based thickeners. Sauces and dips that are sugared should either be omitted or on the side.
Fat
No vegetable oils or margarines
Carbs
So to swap out pasta, rice, potatoes, chips
Example 1
Roasted vegetables
Mixed salad (minus dressing)
Asparagus
Tomatoes
Butternut squash
Avocado
Spinach
Brocolli
Boiled egg
(taken from David Lloyd - Colchester menu as an example)
Example 2
Roasted Mediterranean Vegetables
Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms
Braised Red Cabbage
Butternut Squash
Spinach
Curly Kale Tomatoes
French Beans
Provencale Salad
(taken from Old Seige House - Colchester)
This is just a quick brain dump and does not cover possible deserts, but is a start (I know Harvester has an active swaps menu as standard).
I do feel the numbers for low carb / keto should be defined, as relied on trials have in my view occasionally stretched what many of us would not classify as low carb. I think the diet doctor definitions are about right as a guide:
Ketogenic - 0 t0 20 grams or lower (I believe Virta Health are 30)
Moderate Low Carb: 20 to 50 grams
Liberal Low Carb: 50 to 100 grams (I have seen some go up 130)
In terms of food protocol choices I believe almost anything is better than SAD or equivalents, and that in the context of Diabetes, as we get tested at least once a year we can check health markers and make adjustments. I think danger comes in for say a 20 year old who is on a protocol for 5 years and has not had medical tests.