Beachbag
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 688
- Location
- Nr Swansea, S Wales
- Type of diabetes
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Filling in forms! ;)
I used to be rather fond of real ales but gave them, and other beers, up when I read somewhere how high the carb values are. For a few minutes there I thought I'd stumbled across a replacement, lol.Its a pet peeve of mine that currently alcohol does not have to carry any kind of nutrition lebeling at all, so nearly all beers have no accurate carb info at all. As a rule beers generally have between 20-35g per pint, none that I ever heard of are zero carb.
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Its a pet peeve of mine that currently alcohol does not have to carry any kind of nutrition lebeling at all, so nearly all beers have no accurate carb info at all. As a rule beers generally have between 20-35g per pint, none that I ever heard of are zero carb.
Hmmmm... .wondering if its worth trading half my total daily carbs for a pint!.....maybe an occasional half, lol. Thank youNot quite as high as that, beer has around 10-15g of carbs per pint.
Not quite as high as that, beer has around 10-15g of carbs per pint.
You don't need to give up meat and swap for Quorn. Meat is carb free. I'm not sure, but suspect that Quorn isn't. I agree Qorn tastes nice, but I personally prefer a natural cooked from fresh ingredients diet.
Hana
I used to be rather fond of real ales but gave them, and other beers, up when I read somewhere how high the carb values are. For a few minutes there I thought I'd stumbled across a replacement, lol.
Sounds a good plan.
Try Coors Light, seems to give me less spikes than other beers.
It's not just the sugars though-you need the total grams of carbohydrate per bottle-it could be much higher and it does have a relevance.
Myfitnesspal can be massively innacurate, the data for many foods and especially drinks are crowdsourced, that is, anybody can create a food or drink entry and put whatever they like into the carbs section. i find the figure quoted for carbs to be suspiciously low for that particular product.
The figure is going to depend very much on the brewing process. Especially malting. As well as what you actually mean by a "carb".i stand very happily corrected! i got those figures from a brewer site some months ago and I've been using them ever since
Very lean muscle would be at most 1% glycogen for comparison.Quorn is quite low in carb (roughly 2.2g per 100g). Not keen personally though.
Although not generally advisable for diabetics I personally find that I can tolerate, at the moment at least, small amounts of all of those foods without any adverse effects. I do mean small amounts though and the only bread I can eat is one slice of Burgen soy and linseed. It just goes to show how different we all are and I realize that I am very lucky indeed. Maybe things won't change but I'm not banking on it!Pasta, potatoes, rice, bread (including enriched breads like crumpets) are generally not advisable for diabetics.
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phew, thats the only meat i dont like
Ah man!! Totally agree mate! Liver? YUK!!lol
lol bears eat raw fish, thats why your tongue went blue even though your trying to hide it now, we all know its still blue
my mum is very anemic (cant spell it) and she made us eat liver all the time as kids as its apparently high in iron, ack ack ack!
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