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Healthy and unhealthy breakfasts.

@Robinredbreast
re rice, staple in Asian countries and served like this is a traditional breakfast food bit like porridge
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congee
Years and years ago I had an Asian experience....breakfast was a feast ....the rice cooked with coconut and vegetables was the best I had ever tasted ...
Lovely dhal, a veggies delight if you like spices ...and a wonderful bread made out of chickpea flour ....brings back memories
Breakfast really was lovely ....
 
Wow - what does that do to your blood glucose right after? Cereal, even porridge, puts me at 10 to 12 mmol/L.

They probably are quite high, I never test after. I'm a very fussy eater also and I wouldn't be able to eat what these low carbers eat. I wish I could eat low carb but just can't. Also have a very very sweet tooth!
 
They probably are quite high, I never test after. I'm a very fussy eater also and I wouldn't be able to eat what these low carbers eat. I wish I could eat low carb but just can't. Also have a very very sweet tooth!
I must confess that I had a sweet tooth and was literally physically incapable of resisting eating sugary carby food if it was around.

However, by going low carb I lost the sweet tooth (even 85% chocolate tastes really sweet to me and I had to reduce how much Splenda I put in my coffee) and the carb cravings.

Anyway, to each his or her own.
 
You be better with bran flakes or other bran cereal other than cornflakes, High Glycemic Load cornflakes, where as bran is low.

I realise that Paul but I dont actually like bran type cereals which is why I keep the portion of cornflakes small, im not suggesting it is a great breakfast for anyone its just all I fancy in the mornings and the portion I eat doesnt raise my bg levels too much :)
 
I realise that Paul but I dont actually like bran type cereals which is why I keep the portion of cornflakes small, im not suggesting it is a great breakfast for anyone its just all I fancy in the mornings and the portion I eat doesnt raise my bg levels too much :)
Does it keep you going till lunch ? being such a small portion.
 
I think have what u want for breakfast with limits. I'm not saying choose frosties but if u like cornflakes have them just increase the insulin... u control ur diabetes it doesn't control u
 
I think have what u want for breakfast with limits. I'm not saying choose frosties but if u like cornflakes have them just increase the insulin... u control ur diabetes it doesn't control u
That's great for people on insulin, but types 2s often control their diabetes by diet, which means they can avoid drugs and going into insulin for as long as possible (maybe for ever).
 
I have tried a number of breakfasts since diagnosis.
Over the last few years, Kippers have been a great treat. Kedgeree was also a treat but takes more preparation and contains rice. Once I have a meter, I shall explore the impact of a "low rice" kedgeree.
Baked beans are probably too sugary,
Scrambled eggs are good, especially if I've engineered some left over fish.
Tinned herring with tinned tomato is another "individual" breakfast I suspect will be shared by few.
I used to love a squirt of ketchup on the kipper - that's a pleasure of the past.

Best wishes
Adam
 
My nans diabetic and she eats what she wants
Every morning she has three slices of hovis Doorstep bread with butter and non diabetic jam much to my jealousy
(The thickest white bread u can buy!).plus she has to always have her 2 borbon biscuits when ever she has a coffee. Her sugars are prefect. If they went high over a number of weeks the doctor would increase her metforin
 
My nans diabetic and she eats what she wants
Every morning she has three slices of hovis Doorstep bread with butter and non diabetic jam much to my jealousy
(The thickest white bread u can buy!).plus she has to always have her 2 borbon biscuits when ever she has a coffee. Her sugars are prefect. If they went high over a number of weeks the doctor would increase her metforin
And your point is?
 
My point is if u want to eat this sort of stuff then u should just increase ur medication!
That is a choice you and your nan are free to make, but it is definitely not a choice that I (and many type 2s who post here) are willing to make.

Besides, metformin does not iron out blood glucose spikes, it just lowers overall levels by a couple of mmol/l.
 
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