Can someone please explain ? I noticed that the label on a tin of Baked Beans stated that the values for 100g were carbohydrates 12.6g of which sugars 3.3g.What does this mean? Is this high level? What is considered a reasonable amount of carbs/sugars. I am totally lost!
Hi
@Suze A ,
Like Kenny said, "It depends"... And it does depend on a slew of things, really. And if you're just starting out, I'm guessing you don't yet know what amount of carbs per day suits you. We're all different, you see... So while one person is fine with beans, another might not be, while a third is okay with it if in small amounts. All T2 differ, we don't all have the same level of insulin resistance/sensitivity/output, so you need to find out what works for you, specifically.
How do you do that, you ask? Get yourself a meter and start testing around meals. Test before the meal and 2 hours after the first bite. You'll miss the spike that way, but the information you want is whether your body could process what you've put in there, which it'll let you know after 2 hours have passed. You're looking for a rise of 2.0 mmol/l or less between those numbers. If you're higher than that, a meal had more carbs than you could cope with. If it's 2.0 mmol/l or lower, the meal was perfection far as blood glucose goes, and worth repeating in the future. Keep that up, and your over all blood sugars will come down. You don't have to get it right overnight. I didn't know how to do this when I started out, so I just lowered carbs to some arbitrary daily number, found I felt better on less, halved it again, and ended up on a ketogenic diet of about 20 grams a day or less. It can fluctuate a bit, especially over the holidays of course, but that's the number I feel best at. But that's me. Could well be you feel excellent and have normal, non diabetic numbers at 40 or 60, maybe 80 grams a day. There's no telling, because I'm not you. So take your time to find out what works best for you. You didn't become diabetic overnight, you don't have to fix things overnight either.
I'll also add, being a vegan complicates things a little, because the foods that are low to zero carbs often do come from animals. (Meat, poultry, fish, full fat dairy, eggs), while plant-based foods often contain carbs in varying degrees. Pulses more than spinach, for instance. It's not easy adhering to a vegan diet when low carbing (I can't do it, others who are more creative and have less other issues to deal with as well, can), but there's people here who seem to be able to pull it off, so
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/category/vegetarian-diet-forum.71/ might help with that.
https://www.dietdoctor.com/search?s=vegan could well do, too.
Personally, I'd give the beans a miss. A hundred grams of beans isn't a lot, and at 12,5g of carbs I'd already be going over my limit for a meal. At a portion of 250 grams you'd be taking in quite a bit more. So... Start testing, see what works for you. Then go from there.
Good luck, and welcome,
Jo