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Diet sheet please

Hobittual

Member
Messages
6
At the rate I am going, I will soon be surviving on a filet of ice in a water sauce.
I have cut down on every bad food I can think of, I have stopped drinking 5 months now. I fanatically avoid processed food, I cook every day, never frozen always fresh, yet I am spiralling down the hba1c plughole.
I want to start on a strict diet, proven to work, creative and sustaining that will turn me back into a Brad Pitt look-a-like, or the nearest to that. Plus help to relieve some of the anguish all this is causing.
Any help on this would be wonderful.
 
Daisy1 will be along in the morning with some tips for you and to greet you properly. In the meantime have a look at Viv's Modified Atkins Diet.
 
))Denise(( said:
Daisy1 will be along in the morning with some tips for you and to greet you properly. In the meantime have a look at Viv's Modified Atkins Diet.

Hi Hobittual (nice name) and welcome to the forum I can't give you a diet sheet set out like Viv's, but I can give you some general information, which was prepared for new members, which will give you some tips on what you can and can't eat and other advice on how to look after your diabetes. Ask as many questions as you like as there is usually someone here who will be able to answer you.

 
Thanks for that Daisy1, I will trawl the forum to learn a bit methinks, and work it all out.
I am in a bit of a strange situation, in that I live half the time in the USA and then the UK. So my diet has got to be portable. I fear the trouble wil lie with the USA. Things I have found over there that purport to be Diabetic friendly are, after close scrutiny, really quite awful, there are lots of these to be found. America is a worry to me.
Anyways up, I thank you for pointing me somewhere good, this seems like a nice forum.
Hob
 
Hobittual said:
Things I have found over there that purport to be Diabetic friendly are, after close scrutiny, really quite awful,

As a general rule of thumb Hobittual, any food stuff labelled as diabetic friendly is best avoided whichever side of the pond you are on

Food manufacturers have this idea that we can not eat sugar so sell foods that contain no added sugar as diabetic friendly despite the fact that they may be very high in carbohydrates or have dangerous additives added to improve the taste instead of the sugar that is left out.

Stick to home made/cooked meals and away from processed foods and at least you will know what you are eating, then simply check your bg levels before and 2 hours after eating and you will see what that meal does to your bg level, if after 2 hours your levels are not returning to close to your pre meal level then you may start to look at reducing the carb content of that meal.

We all find that certain foods will affect us more than others, for example some people eat porridge for breakfast and it doesnt spike their bg others cant eat porridge as it does spike their bg, and this is why it is difficult to give a diet sheet that would suite everyone.

Foods high in carbs such as white bread, pasta, white rice and potatoes are the obvious place to start making reductions.
 
Cheers Sid.
I always bring over from the US a brand of sugar free maple syrup. Last time I was there, 5 weeks ago, my Wife found some sugar free Honey!! It tasted really nice, but when I investigated it, it was made from paint thinners, or perhaps not that, but something equally incidious, so it was binned. My maple syrup on the other hand is actually safe, in scheme of things. It isn't as though I want for sweet things anymore really, but the syrup is nice.
What I find hard in the US is to get any food that hasn't been meddled with, even the "fresh" vegetables are pretty spooky characters. As I must knuckle down about all this, it will be a challenge when I leave Blighty.
Hob
 
Hi. It might we wise to avoid 'sweet' things such as the artifical syrup as they might maintain a taste for sweet foods which I've gradually trained myself out of. Don't worry about alcohol; it is normally not a problem for diabetics and if anything slightly reduces your BS. It might be worth telling us some of the foods you currently do eat in case we can spot where some changes might be needed. How long have you been diagnosed? Are you on any meds yet? Although diet is the first thing to attack you may need to move onto some meds. I was unable to keep my HbA1C low without tablets despite a low carb diet, exercise etc.
 
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