NoCrbs4Me
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,700
- Location
- The Rocky Mountain Foothills, Canada
- Type of diabetes
- I reversed my Type 2
- Treatment type
- Other
- Dislikes
- Vegetables
None.
glycemic index, then there was glycemic load...then there was the list that counted the insulin stimulation, where yogurt produced more insulin than the carb rate would suggest ....anyone remember the name for this?Mars bar and snickers have the same GI number, so take your pick.
Fried in coconut oil and then serve with a dollop of double cream (optional)Wrapped in bacon and deep fried.
glycemic index, then there was glycemic load...then there was the list that counted the insulin stimulation, where yogurt produced more insulin than the carb rate would suggest ....anyone remember the name for this?
take a healthy person, eat something and measure at 2 hr and call it 'the GI number' even though a 1 or 3 hr may be wildly different..diabetes pizza effect
I can only suggest don't get too caught up in the GI
http://www.professional.diabetes.org/admin/UserFiles/0 - Sean/dc132042 FINAL.pdf
at best....
"Glycemic index and glycemic load ....Substituting low–glycemic load foods for higher–glycemic load foods may modestly improve glycemic control."
I wouldn't call the american diabetic association an "odd googled internet report", but you can if you want toYou don't need the odd googled internet report, I can only tell you it worked very well for me, in conjunction with testing my BG with my meter, you can see the results in my sig.
What's the difference between following a low GI/GL diet compared to setting a carbohydrate intake level that doesn't increase your blood glucose above a certain level based on personal testing?
The difference is that if you set a carb limit and decide say I'll have 100g of cooked rice and you choose to have it in the form of sticky jasmine rice, you get a rapid rise in glucose levels you will actually absorb more of the carbohydrate than if you had chosen to have 100g of converted rice or brown basmati.(where some of the starch will be fermented in the gut)What's the difference between following a low GI/GL diet compared to setting a carbohydrate intake level that doesn't increase your blood glucose above a certain level based on personal testing?
Sounds like a huge waste of time and effort.
Is less time and effort required to learn how much of different carb sources you can cope with empirically through trial end error and personal testing?Sounds like a huge waste of time and effort.
Is less time and effort required to learn how much of different carb sources you can cope with empirically through trial end error and personal testing?
The GI or GL value just gives you a rough way of selecting between two alternative carbs. It is not a license not to test or not to limit your carb intake.
As such I consider it complimentary rather than incompatible with an LCHF approach.
Pavlos
That probably means that you are having to restrict carbs and increase fats more than you would need to if you actually selected the right carbs.I already have a rough way - the grams of digestible carbs.
I already have a rough way - the grams of digestible carbs.
If that method suits you, and it's a diet you can stick to, the rough and dirty way obviously works for you.
I prefer to tune it more, and invested more time, and effort, as you have said, working a more refined system, which works far better for me.
Each to his own, so long as you're happy with your own method, and your own numbers.
I guess it's because I don't want to have to restrict carbs.I guess I'm failing to see the usefulness of it. I am somewhat obtuse, though.