Not sure whether to give you a hug or a funny for that?I don't get a sugar spike from them either but I sure get a pooper spike.
There was a time that I didn't know about this hidden effect. I was working interstate and took the family with me just for the trip. Ended up with a bad dose of a cold. My lovely Mrs Croc bought me a couple of bags of cough lollies, sugar free of course. I devoured them. Of course I got the runs and didn't know why. Kept eating the lollies blissfully unaware. The dark water kept on coming. It went on for another day. Finally, while sitting on the throne for yet another release I was reading the packet label from the lollies. Needless to say, I nearly fell off the throne.Not sure whether to give you a hug or a funny for that?
Are the carbs in your sugar free sweets from polyols, otherwise callered alcohol sugars? Examples of these are sorbitol, erythritol or xylitol. These are a group of sweetners that affect different people differently. It is assumed that they aren’t absorbed in the GI tract, that’s why they often have the warning “excessive consumption may have a laxative effect”, so although the carb count is high you might not absorb them. I’m lucky that I don’t get a sugar spike from them but some people it would seem do. The only way you’ll know is to test.
Werthers do a sugar free version of the "Originals".
They apparently taste as good as the sugar version - they keep dispaearing from the desk.
Do you use a meter? If so, you can just test if you tolerate a piece of candy. After all, the sugar/carb percentage is high, but the amount is small (as long as you don't gobble half a bag in one go). Also, it might be that you can tolerate it better as a 'dessert' after a lowish carb meal.
I hope you'll find a way to still enjoy your favourite candy!
I was just diagnosed with type 2 diabetes on July 6th. My whole life I've been a hard candy (Life Savers, Jolly Ranchers) fan.
I figured they're not good for diabetes so I sought out sugar-free candy and realized those have just as many carbs as regular candy.
Should I not have hard candy at all? (I can't have gum as I have TMJ and the chewing gives me jaw and temple pain.) Thanks!
I would watch out for anything labelled 'sugar free'. Sugar is only one content we need to look out for.
A very common misunderstanding. After all, sugar is a carbohydrate.For some reason I thought sugar free = no carbs. I think I'll just eschew candy for now. Interestingly when I hit my mid-40s a few years ago I found that my tolerance for sweets decreased significantly, not only with my taste buds but with my tummy too.
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