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- 11,582
- Type of diabetes
- I reversed my Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
I'm with @Robbity here. I would class high carb foods as those that are more than say 10% carb and would include pasta, potatoes, bread and rice in that range and would avoid them. I personally only eat carbs in the form of cream and green veg and salad and a few here and there from other foodstuffs. I do describe my diet as ultra low carb though and would certainly target less than 20g of carbs per day. Yes I guess I could eat 20g of carbs in the form of pasta in a day but that would a very small portion and seems a bit pointless to me when I could have a whole cauliflower instead. Just one perspective but one which has worked very well for me. I guess I would describe my way of eating now as Ketogenic rather than LCHF although that is a recent modification for me. I have always been very low carb though.as i understand it, carb calculation means the total amount of carbs you eat during the day, regardless of what foods those carbs come from.
Are you confusing it with low or high GI foods?
If someone has 50g of carbs as potato, or as any other carb containing food or drink, it is still 50g of carbs. Isnt it?
what do you mean by a high carb food? There may be more carbs, weight for weight, in some foods than other foods, but 50g of carbs is still 50g, regardless of how you choose to make up that amount.
I dont understand how some people can say they eat no carb foods if you are right that they actually do eat some. I thought that no-carbers do exactly that - they eat no carbs.
I do not agree that it is confusing and befuddling or counter productive to clarify these terms and understand exactly what is meant.
@Robbity , as I understand it, less than 130gr of carb per day can be called low carb. It's not where I would put to break off point for terminology, but that's where it is, I gather.
So it's low carb high protein? If you cut carbs, either fat or protein intake need to go up, relatively.
I looked at week 1. They said 120 - 150 grams of carbs (so about 480 to 600 calories a day from carbs), but nothing about fat or protein. I'm guessing they tell people to avoid saturated fat and red meat and eat lots of vegetables. I don't consider a diet high in fat extreme. I'm at around 200 grams of fat a day, all animal fat. Still, I have no doubt this programme is better than the healthy plate guideline or whatever it's called these days.Have a look at the programme. It is a gentle 10 week step by step guide, allowing people to gradually learn where carbs can be found and counted, then cut down and controlled. There are weekly lessons. It is a brilliant intro for people who have not previously had to get their heads around any of this stuff. No extremism, no High Fat, just sensible food awareness and the option to take it as far as the individual would like.
Now, a fair few people are going to think 'well, if this works, I will take it to the next step', but that isn't what the programme is about. It is intended as an intro. And it works - witness the lowered blood glucose and HbA1cs, the reduced meds, and the weight loss.
Hopefully @Administrator will be able to post the talk here, and we can get to see the stats.![]()
as i understand it, carb calculation means the total amount of carbs you eat during the day, regardless of what foods those carbs come from.
Are you confusing it with low or high GI foods?
If someone has 50g of carbs as potato, or as any other carb containing food or drink, it is still 50g of carbs. Isnt it?
what do you mean by a high carb food? There may be more carbs, weight for weight, in some foods than other foods, but 50g of carbs is still 50g, regardless of how you choose to make up that amount.
Probably not if you want to lose weight as well. I was told to increase my calorie intake by my GP and I increased my fat and protein intake. Guess what? I gained weight and my BG went up. That's just me though, others will have different experiences.. . . . . either fat or protein intake need to go up . . . . .
It also depends on how much carbohydrate your eating. If you're gaining weight, try reducing carbs, rather than calories.Probably not if you want to lose weight as well. I was told to increase my calorie intake by my GP and I increased my fat and protein intake. Guess what? I gained weight and my BG went up. That's just me though, others will have different experiences.
If you're gaining weight, try reducing carbs, rather than calories.
I haven't eaten a vegetable or fruit since June 2015.Down to 40 gms to 80 gms, I'd have to forgo the vegetable matter that I eat to get lower, wouldn't leave much. I eat peppers, mushrooms, courgette, egg plant, onion, cauliflower, cabbage, broccoli. Basically no vegetable that grows underground, might have sweet potato occasionally.
Many moons ago I tried the Atkins zero carb approach, very tricky, even if only for a few days.
I haven't eaten a vegetable or fruit since June 2015.
rather a delicate question but what about constipation and bowel health?Meat, obviously.
Not just possible, quite easy to do.Obviously! Now that I've done some googling I can only say, how interesting. Just reading https://healthimpactnews.com/2013/w...-who-ate-nothing-but-meat-for-an-entire-year/ is very interesting. Glad to see you're doing so well on it.
I'm tempted, when I consider that I gave up sugar 50 years ago (everyone put it in tea/coffee in those days) also chocolate, biscuits and cake, I gave up smoking 35 years ago, alcohol 10 years ago and then gave up most bread/pasta/rice/potato 4 years ago, giving up vegetables as well? . . . . Going to have to think on that one, obviously not impossible.