phoenix
Expert
- Messages
- 5,671
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
I've been thinking about the pasta/eggs/cheese conundrum over night.
I don't think its odd that either cheese or eggs have a glycemic response. When you eat a food containing protein it converts some of it to glucose but this takes time.I don't think that this is the glucose causing the rise in glucose levels. I think this comes from the glucose released by the liver to 'compensate' for the insulin released when protein is eaten. It isn't a very large rise (it would be good to see the graph too see it visually)
What is surprising is the similarly very low rise also caused by the white pasta. This morning I looked at the list of products used and think I've found a possible explanation. They used pasta spirals cooked for 8 min and then cooled to 4C. Then possibly this reheated in a microwave.( the list is not absolutely clear on this)
1) The pasta would be very 'al dente' which lowers GI
2) When starches are cooked the starch molecules become more easily absorbed by the body (gelatinisation) However when they are then cooled some of the starch molecules form tight crystals called resistant starch. (retrograde starch) These are not easily absorbed by the body so this lowers the GI considerably.
3) If it were served cold this would probably explain it (given that some white pastas are lowish GI anyway.).
4) If it was microwaved I don't really know how this would effect resistant starches . Logic says they would become less resistant, however, I found this (don't know how much credence to give it):
Actually it is worth looking at what was actually eaten in that study. I thought the lentils should have had lower effect on the glucose levels until I discovered that they were served in a tomato sauce.(how much sugar in that sauce?)
Borofergie:
I don't think its odd that either cheese or eggs have a glycemic response. When you eat a food containing protein it converts some of it to glucose but this takes time.I don't think that this is the glucose causing the rise in glucose levels. I think this comes from the glucose released by the liver to 'compensate' for the insulin released when protein is eaten. It isn't a very large rise (it would be good to see the graph too see it visually)
What is surprising is the similarly very low rise also caused by the white pasta. This morning I looked at the list of products used and think I've found a possible explanation. They used pasta spirals cooked for 8 min and then cooled to 4C. Then possibly this reheated in a microwave.( the list is not absolutely clear on this)
1) The pasta would be very 'al dente' which lowers GI
2) When starches are cooked the starch molecules become more easily absorbed by the body (gelatinisation) However when they are then cooled some of the starch molecules form tight crystals called resistant starch. (retrograde starch) These are not easily absorbed by the body so this lowers the GI considerably.
3) If it were served cold this would probably explain it (given that some white pastas are lowish GI anyway.).
4) If it was microwaved I don't really know how this would effect resistant starches . Logic says they would become less resistant, however, I found this (don't know how much credence to give it):
http://fanaticcook.blogspot.fr/2008/01/ ... tarch.htmlRS3 - The most resistant kind. Starch, mostly amylose, that becomes resistant to digestion when heated then cooled. Also known as retrograded starch. Examples are cooled cooked potatoes and beans. Amounts in pasta vary and are dependant upon the structure of the pasta, and heating and cooling times.
Boiling RS3 will not easily free it for digestion, as it will RS2. In fact, moist heating will encourage the starch molecules to swell then rearrange themselves as they cool, making this starch almost entirely resistant to digestion by pancreatic amylases. Another unique feature of RS3 ... repeated heating and cooling cycles will further increase the RS content
Actually it is worth looking at what was actually eaten in that study. I thought the lentils should have had lower effect on the glucose levels until I discovered that they were served in a tomato sauce.(how much sugar in that sauce?)
Borofergie:
Kurt Harris weighs in on this is in a discussion on Richard Nikoley's blog(Free the Animal :The moderate starch Experiment)I'd therefore be interested to see what happened to my insulin levels, now that my metabolic machinery is set up to process less than 10g of carb a meal. We talked the other day about how people eating a large quantity of carbs after eating a ketonic diet had paticularly poor insulin responses, this is probably the reason why