CherryAA
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 2,170
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
http://www.foodmanufacture.co.uk/In...gn=15-Sep-2017&c=b1cJcbmXah9ApwAo9s+/ig==&p2=
At an early stage in my diabetes investigations, I saw a lot of recipes which effectively used other flours created from various nuts to replace wheat flours in baking.
I've never been much into baked goods so I decided that I would just leave the whole lot out of my diet.
One of the things that worried me about it - was that it seemed to me to be potentially a dangerous path .
i.e. just because a hazelnut eaten naturally is healthy, that doesn't necessarily mean that hazelnut flour will be. It seems that it is often the PROCESSING rather than the product itself that seems to contribute to the problem.
I still don't know if any of it is dangerous, but this study does seem to suggest that if you eat for example almonds as almond flour instead of as almonds, then the resulting product may be more fattening than the product eaten naturally because more fats will be absorbed from it quicker . The sheer extent of the differences in absorption also confirms my worries that we change the way we eat these natural products at our peril. It is also why I am concerned that even if the message does get across, once the processed food industry becomes involved, low carb processed foods may also prove to be dangerous.
At an early stage in my diabetes investigations, I saw a lot of recipes which effectively used other flours created from various nuts to replace wheat flours in baking.
I've never been much into baked goods so I decided that I would just leave the whole lot out of my diet.
One of the things that worried me about it - was that it seemed to me to be potentially a dangerous path .
i.e. just because a hazelnut eaten naturally is healthy, that doesn't necessarily mean that hazelnut flour will be. It seems that it is often the PROCESSING rather than the product itself that seems to contribute to the problem.
I still don't know if any of it is dangerous, but this study does seem to suggest that if you eat for example almonds as almond flour instead of as almonds, then the resulting product may be more fattening than the product eaten naturally because more fats will be absorbed from it quicker . The sheer extent of the differences in absorption also confirms my worries that we change the way we eat these natural products at our peril. It is also why I am concerned that even if the message does get across, once the processed food industry becomes involved, low carb processed foods may also prove to be dangerous.