Food Advice Please

Colinmeager

Member
Messages
5
Hi folks
I’m a newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic, and was wondering if anyone would be kind enough to suggest alternative to rice, pasta and potatoes, that will fill me up and keep my weight ON! My issue is, that I don’t want or need to lose weight! I am concerned that If I cut out too many carbs I will lose weight. I’m 6ft 2 and weigh about 85kg. I do quite a lot of exercise and need to eat or I lose weight. I just have a high metabolism. I’ve cut out all sugars and eat lots of fruit and vegetables. To be honest I always ate pretty healthy anyway. Any help or suggestions would be great thank you - Colin
 

xfieldok

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,182
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
Welcome to the forum. Food is a bit of a minefield when we first start.

Fruit is best avoided except for berries.

We generally avoid underground veg.

Cauliflower rice is a great alternative. Spiralizer courgettes for pasta.

Google keto pasta for more ideas.

T2 means you cannot process carbs, you need to cut them to a minimum.

Are you using a glucose meter to test your reaction to food?
 
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Colinmeager

Member
Messages
5
Thank you for the swift reply. I’ve bought a Accu chek nano. I tested my blood yesterday before breakfast at 7.8 after poached eggs on white sourdough bread and 2hrs later it was 14.2 so I assumed that was the white bread ( I assumed it would happen) I’ll have a google as you suggested. Thanks again
 

Brunneria

Guru
Retired Moderator
Messages
21,889
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Diet only
Lots of alternatives to rice, pasta and potatoes available:

cauliflower can be riced, mashed, steamed, roasted
Swede, celeriac and turnip are all much lower carb than potato, sweet potato, parsnip and carrot (but individual tolerances vary hugely so check what your bg does for each)
Some people tolerate buckwheat (incl soba noodles) better than they tolerate wheat noodles
There are numerous low carb breads, either bought cooked, bought to bake yourself, or starting from scratch with a recipe

you can also just have more veg, and then add butter, olive oil, grated cheese, low carb cheese sauce (yum!)
I always took the view that bread and pasta were just their as a vehicle for the sauce and filling, so found it relatively easy to subtract the stodge and enjoy the sauce/filling undiluted. :D

look up ‘fathead pizza recipe’ and ‘fathead pastry recipes’
Also ‘keto cake recipe’ ‘keto brownie/cookie/muffin/crumble/choc mousse/whatever floats your boat’

Also have a look for something called ‘bulletproof coffee’ or ‘bulletproof hot chocolate’, or ‘keto golden milk’
 
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xfieldok

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,182
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
For breakfast try eggs and bacon. High meat sausages are good. Mushrooms are good.

Check out dietdoctor.com for low carb suggestions.

To maintain weight increase fats and proteins.
 
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Tophat1900

Well-Known Member
Messages
2,407
Type of diabetes
Type 3c
Treatment type
Other
Dislikes
Uncooked bacon
I have the same link for nutrition in my signature line that Jimlahey pointed to you.

https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/blog-entry/the-nutritional-thingy.2330/

This is the info below, it's a great write upu.

There’s a few things you should know.

1. Practically all carbs turn to glucose once ingested, so not just straight sugars, but starches too. Food doesn’t have to taste sweet to make your blood sugars skyrocket.

2. A meter helps you know what foods agree with you, and which don’t. Test before and 2 hours after the first bite. If you go up more than 2.0 mmol/l, the meal was carbier than you could handle. (It’s easy to remember, as you’re a T2: all 2’s, all over the place!)

3. In case you didn’t know already, this isn’t your fault. It’s genetics, medication, decades of bad dietary advice, and basically all manner of things, but nothing you can actually blame yourself for.

4. Diabetes T2 is a progressive condition, unless you (also) change your diet. So you have options. Diet-only, diet with medication, or medication only. But that last option will most likely mean more medication over the years. (And there is more than just metformin, so if it doesn’t agree with you, there’s lots of others to try). So even if going really low carb isn’t for you, you might consider moderately low carb an option, with meds to assist.

5. Are you overweight? 90% of T2’s are. Yeah, that means 10% are slim and always were.* If you did gain weight, it was the precursor of this metabolic condition. We make loads of insulin, but become insensitive to it. So carbs we eat turn to glucose, and normally, insulin helps us burn that glucose for fuel. When it doesn’t, that glucose is stored in fat cells instead. When those fat stores are full, the glucose remains in our bloodstream, overflowing, into our eyes, tears, urine, saliva… And then we’re T2’s. So weight gain is a symptom, not a cause. This also means that “regular” dietary advice doesn’t work for us. The problem lies in our inability to process carbs. And most diets focus on lowering fats and upping carb intake. Which is the direct opposite of what a T2, or prediabetic, for that matter, needs.

6. There are 3 macro-nutrients. Fats, protein and carbohydrates. Those macro’s mean we get the micro-nutrients we need: that would be vitamins and minerals. So… If you ditch the carbs, you should up another macro-nutrient to compensate, to make sure you don’t get malnourished or vitamin deficient. Carbs make our blood sugars rise. Protein too, but nowhere near as bad as carbs do, so they’re alright in moderation. Fats however… Fats are as good as a glucose-flatline. Better yet, they’ll mitigate the effects of any carbs we do ingest, slowing down their uptake and thus the sugar-spike. Contrary to what we’ve been told for decades; fats are our friends.

7. Worried about cholesterol? On a low carb diet, your cholesterol may rise a little as you start to lose weight. That’s a good thing though. (Believe it or not). What was already there, stored in your body, is starting to head for the exit, and for that it’ll go into your bloodstream first. So when you have lost weight and it stabilises, so will your cholesterol. And it’ll probably be lower than what it was before you started out.

8. You’ll lose weight on a low carb diet. Weight loss will help with your insulin-resistance, and not only that… Going low carb might help with other issues as well, like non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and depression.

9. Always ask for your test results. You don’t know where you’re going, if you don’t know where you’ve been.

10. Last, but certainly not least: If you are on medication that has hypoglycemia listed as a side-effect, like Gliclazide for instance, do NOT attempt a LCHF diet without a meter nor your doctors’ knowledge/assistance. You can drop blood glucose levels too far, too fast, if your dosage isn’t adjusted accordingly. This could mean a lower dose in stages or even stopping medication completely. Never do this without discussing it with your doctor first!


So what raises blood sugars? Aside from the obvious (sugar), starches raise blood glucose too. So bread, and anything made with grain/oats flour, rice, potatoes, pasta, corn, cereals (including all the “healthy choices”, like Weetabix and muesli), most beans and most fruits. So you’ll want to limit your intake, or scratch them altogether.

Which food items remain on the shopping list? Well, meat, fish, poultry, above ground veggies/leafy greens, eggs, cheese, heavy cream, full fat Greek yoghurt, full fat milk, extra dark chocolate (85% Lindt’s is great!), avocado, (whole) tomatoes, berries, olives, nuts, that sort of thing… Meal ideas? Have a couple:

Scrambled eggs with bacon, cheese, mushrooms, tomato, maybe some high meat content sausages?
Eggs with ham, bacon and cheese
Omelet with spinach and/or smoked salmon
Omelet with cream, cinnamon, with some berries and coconut shavings
Full fat Greek yoghurt with nuts and berries
Leafy green salad with a can of tuna (oil, not brine!), mayonnaise, capers, olives and avocado
Leafy green salad with (warmed goat's) cheese and bacon, maybe a nice vinaigrette?
Meat, fish or poultry with veggies. I usually go for cauliflower rice or broccoli rice, with cheese and bacon to bulk it up. Never the same meal twice in a row because of various herbs/spices.


Snacks? Pork scratchings, cheese, olives, extra dark chocolate, nuts. :)

Of course, there’s loads more on the web, for people more adventurous than I. (Which is pretty much everyone). Just google whatever you want to make and add “keto” to it, and you’ll get a low carb version. There’s a lot of recipes on the diabetes.co.uk website, as well as on www.dietdoctor.com where you’ll also find visual (carb content) guides and videos. And I can wholeheartedly endorse Dr. Jason Fung’s book The Diabetes Code. It’ll help you understand what’s going on in your body and how to tackle it, whilst not being a dry read. Not only that, but you’ll know what to ask your doctor, and you’ll understand the answers, which is, I believe, quite convenient.

*If you can't afford to lose weight, do NOT go for Intermittent Fasting/One Meal A Day. Sticking with three meals a day, 3 snacks a day, all low carb, high fat, moderate protein, should keep your weight up to par while keeping your bloodsugars in check.
 
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Daibell

Master
Messages
12,642
Type of diabetes
LADA
Treatment type
Insulin
Hi. Yes, fats and protein. Can I ask whether you have started losing weight recently without trying and also how old you are? Occasionally people are misdiagnosed as T2 when they are in fact late onset T1. The latter can cause weight loss due to body fat burning.
 
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Colinmeager

Member
Messages
5
Hi the weight has been between 13st and 13st 6lbs for many years now. My fear is burning lots of calories doing sport and not having the pasta, rice and potatoes to fill me up afterwards lol! Which as has been mentioned, hasn’t been doing me much good I guess! I’ve already bought some cauliflower and courgettes to try as suggested, and need to not be so concerned about fats perhaps. Been some great advice already
 

Paul-H

Member
Messages
16
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
Hi Colin, like you i'm recently diagnosed and was a bit lost. The lovely people on this forum will give you all the guidance and advice you will need. I spent a few days reading around here, following links to other informative sites and reading them as well.
The BG meter is probably the best way for you to find out which foods affect you and how. We're all different and what one T2 can eat without effect might not work for you.
I was quite surprised to find that Lidl Bratwurst sausages have very few if any carbs at all!
My 3pm BG reading was 5.5
At 5pm I had 3 of those sausages (grilled), mushrooms (also grilled) in a sauce made with full fat single cream, salt and pepper and a sprinkle of paprika, a big serving of green leaf salad with tomatoes and cucumber and a low carb salad dressing. At 7:10pm my BG was 5.2!
I've become a bit of a carb counter at the supermarket and check everything now.
Anyway, hope all goes well for you. There's a lot of knowledgable people here only too willing to help!
 

Resurgam

Expert
Messages
9,849
Type of diabetes
Type 2 (in remission!)
Treatment type
Diet only
You can't have cut out all sugar but still be eating fruit - fructose is still sugar.
Personally, I fry food - I put a steak or chop into a frying pan and cook it along with the vegetables I can get these days - mushrooms have been absent from the local shops for a couple of weeks now. Cooked at a steady pace the meat releases its fat and juices and it seems to be able to fuel me for 12 hours easily.
I would have been going out to service the knitting machines at the local Arts University in normal times, and although it involves a lot of hauling machines around I find it no problem. Now that I have reversed my type two and presumably lowered my insulin levels, I have no difficulty in releasing energy from storage when required, so no feeling that I need filling up afterwards.
 
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