I'm sick of having poultry for virtually every meal. I don't like fish or eggs so protein sources are limited. I do occasionally have red meat but I'm fearful of my fat intake.
Hi Captain Crunch,I'm sick of having poultry for virtually every meal. I don't like fish or eggs so protein sources are limited. I do occasionally have red meat but I'm fearful of my fat intake.
I'm sick of taking bagfuls of food to work. I often work 12-hour shifts so I need to take 2 meals and some snacky things. Gone are the days when a trip to the vending machine or sandwich shop would satisfy the munchies.
I'm sick of the limited choices available to me when eating out. Planning a meal out is a major undertaking involving studying nutrition lists to see if the establishment has anything I can have.
I know instinctively which supermarket aisles to avoid as nothing of value resides withinHi Captain Crunch,
It really doesn't take long before you instinctively know which things in a supermarket are Low carb and which ones you need to check the label - unless you keep on shopping at different supermarket chains.
From reading between the lines it appears that you have a fear of fats. Many of us have found that Fat is our Friend. I had followed the standard advice and was eating very High 'brown' Carbs, very Low Fat way of eating for over 10yrs before my health really started to nosedive. It was only after both my 3x Coronary Artery Bypass and then my T2D diagnosis that I realised that I couldn't trust that dietary advice. I switched to LCHF, reduced my HbA1C into the pre-diabetic range and lost 23lbs in 4 months despite being slim (a TOFI) in the first place.
Your weight problem is likely best solved by avoiding snacking - keeping the periods of higher Insulin as short as possible with as long a period as possible between higher Insulin levels. Eat to satiety at each meal so that you can minimise snacks. If you must have snacks, most nuts make good, handy snacks ( Macadamia, Brazil, Walnut, Almond, Hazelnut, Pecan, Pistachio and even peanuts - which are really a legume). Hard Cheeses also make good handy snacks as well as being useful in full meals.
Eating out isn't great since so few restaurants cater for Low Carb, but there are many places where you can eat fish or meat.
I have eaten low carb in Chinese restaurants, in Indian restaurants (- just avoid the rice/noodles), in European food places (- steak/lamb/pork/chicken/fish with a salad) and in Southern African (- Nandos).
Thank you so much for these suggestions. I have difficulty thinking out of the box on this matter as my previous eating habits are pretty deeply ingrained. I can't get used to not buying something to eat straight off the shelf and having to prepare so much in advance.You love cheese?
Then put grated cheese on your hot vegetables.
Or add grated cheese to coleslaw.
Make cauliflower or broccoli cheese to fill the potato shaped gap on your plate
Buy the wide flat field mushrooms and stuff them with smoked cheese or stilton or boursin
you love nuts?
Yup. So do I.
Put spoons of nut butter into greek yogurt and stir thoroughly. Enjoy.
Make satay sauces (v easy!)
https://www.dietdoctor.com/recipes/chicken-satay-sauce
Get 70% cocoa solid choc, melt it in the microwave, stir in brazil nuts, cashews or hazelnuts. Spread onto a baking sheet, cool, break and snack on the pieces.
look up low carb mug cake recipes (1min in the microwave) and you get a fresh hot portion of cake:
https://www.ditchthecarbs.com/low-carb-mug-cakes/
want cereal for breakfast?
Then google ‘low carb muesli’ and throw together a muesli mix, or buy some (there are plenty around nowadays).
want bread?
Most supermarkets do Burgen low carb/higher protein breads
Or buy bread mixes from Dr Almond or a paleo bread mix from Amazon
I can assure you that there is absolutely no reason to go hungry or feel deprived. You just need to shift to the new mindset.
It's really early days for you and you seem to be doing really well so far.I was diagnosed with type 2 on December 8th 2019
I hate cooking too, and spend as little time as I can get away with in the kitchen. No way am I ever going to change. I also have binge eating disorder which I have to try and work round.I tried going down to 50 carbs per day but it was too much for me and it triggered a monumental carb binge which I am only just now getting a grip on after 4 months. So I've decided I will just concentrate on reduced portions of carbs and see how well I get along at next blood test.Hi Captain Crunch,
It really doesn't take long before you instinctively know which things in a supermarket are Low carb and which ones you need to check the label - unless you keep on shopping at different supermarket chains.
From reading between the lines it appears that you have a fear of fats. Many of us have found that Fat is our Friend. I had followed the standard advice and was eating very High 'brown' Carbs, very Low Fat way of eating for over 10yrs before my health really started to nosedive. It was only after both my 3x Coronary Artery Bypass and then my T2D diagnosis that I realised that I couldn't trust that dietary advice. I switched to LCHF, reduced my HbA1C into the pre-diabetic range and lost 23lbs in 4 months despite being slim (a TOFI) in the first place.
Your weight problem is likely best solved by avoiding snacking - keeping the periods of higher Insulin as short as possible with as long a period as possible between higher Insulin levels. Eat to satiety at each meal so that you can minimise snacks. If you must have snacks, most nuts make good, handy snacks ( Macadamia, Brazil, Walnut, Almond, Hazelnut, Pecan, Pistachio and even peanuts - which are really a legume). Hard Cheeses also make good handy snacks as well as being useful in full meals.
Eating out isn't great since so few restaurants cater for Low Carb, but there are many places where you can eat fish or meat.
I have eaten low carb in Chinese restaurants, in Indian restaurants (- just avoid the rice/noodles), in European food places (- steak/lamb/pork/chicken/fish with a salad) and in Southern African (- Nandos).
I understand all the above but my hubby has to add to all this, the fact that he needs to put weight on. Low carbs for type 2 does not achieve this. He is diabetic due to drugs for cancerI was diagnosed with type 2 on December 8th 2019 and I'm severely struggling with it from a diet point of view. Food was always a great pleasure to me but that's been effectively denied now.
In short:
I'm sick of having food always on my mind. I'm always thinking about what I can have to eat.
I'm sick of continually buying fresh produce only to throw most of it away as it goes out of date before I can use it all.
I'm sick of reading nutritional labels only to be repeatedly disappointed by the carb/sugar content.
I'm sick of spending so much time cooking. I do batch-cook and freeze stuff but it's still a chore to me.
I'm sick of so many recipes being 'fussy'. Finely chopping veggies/herbs is not my forte.
I'm sick of having insufficient storage/fridge/freezer space for food.
I'm sick of having poultry for virtually every meal. I don't like fish or eggs so protein sources are limited. I do occasionally have red meat but I'm fearful of my fat intake.
I'm sick of taking bagfuls of food to work. I often work 12-hour shifts so I need to take 2 meals and some snacky things. Gone are the days when a trip to the vending machine or sandwich shop would satisfy the munchies.
I'm sick of the limited choices available to me when eating out. Planning a meal out is a major undertaking involving studying nutrition lists to see if the establishment has anything I can have.
On the plus side, I do feel physically better and I've lost about a stone and a half (21 lbs) in weight. I just don't think I can maintain this. A major carb orgy is very tempting right now but the potential long-term health consequences aren't appealing.
Apologies for the rant but hopefully you'll understand where I'm coming from. This diagnosis has had a major impact on my former lifestyle and it's taking some getting used to.
Low carb can add weight without messing up blood glucose if you increase fats and proteins.I understand all the above but my hubby has to add to all this, the fact that he needs to put weight on. Low carbs for type 2 does not achieve this. He is diabetic due to drugs for cancer
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