Julietterporter said:Defren said:mixed berry's and flax.
AAAAAGGGGGHHHHHH!
I'm sorry, but I am a teacher and my pet gripe is mis-use of the humble apostrophe. Lovely though you are, the education system has failed you. An apostrophe is not needed. The plural of BERRY is BERRIES. 'Change the Y into I and add ES' is the rule. I have OCD so you can, hopefully, forgive me for going on. I try every day not to take marker pens out to street and shop signs. One day I'll give in to the temptation and probably end up behind bars. You may be thankful for my silence! :silent:
Sorry
Juliette x
Julietterporter said:I'm sorry, but I am a teacher and my pet gripe is mis-use of the humble apostrophe. Lovely though you are, the education system has failed you. An apostrophe is not needed. The plural of BERRY is BERRIES. 'Change the Y into I and add ES' is the rule. I have OCD so you can, hopefully, forgive me for going on. I try every day not to take marker pens out to street and shop signs. One day I'll give in to the temptation and probably end up behind bars. You may be thankful for my silence! :silent:
Julietterporter said:Defren said:mixed berry's and flax.
AAAAAGGGGGHHHHHH!
I'm sorry, but I am a teacher and my pet gripe is mis-use of the humble apostrophe. Lovely though you are, the education system has failed you. An apostrophe is not needed. The plural of BERRY is BERRIES. 'Change the Y into I and add ES' is the rule. I have OCD so you can, hopefully, forgive me for going on. I try every day not to take marker pens out to street and shop signs. One day I'll give in to the temptation and probably end up behind bars. You may be thankful for my silence! :silent:
Sorry
Juliette x
glucosegirl said:Hi,
I was diagnosed with Type 1 nearly 17 months ago. I use plain Rachel's yogurt or plain Total yogurt. Both brands do a low fat and fat free version. The Total one is greek yogurt and the Rachel's is ordinary yogurt. Both of them are easily available from most supermarkets.
In general the yogurts that are high in sugars are the flavored ones as they are often flavored with fruit, honey etc and these are high in sugar. Plain unflavored yogurt tends not to have much sugar. The carbs and sugars in the unflavored ones comes from lactose. This is a very slow releasing sugar.
Sugary yogurts shouldn't be a problem though, if your son wants to have one occasionally, as long as he takes the right amount of insulin for it. Although sugary foods in general are not healthy regardless of whether you have diabetes.
robertconroy wrote
Why low fat?