Am very new to low-carb and have taken great pleasure in having a milky coffee most days and I am wondering whether this is a bad move?? My sugars seem to be affected by the milk in a cup of tea let alone a milky coffee ! I guess I will need to give it a miss and see if things improve.
All advice gratefully received, Jude.
You can't have all dairy on LCHF: milk, yoghurt and cottage cheese are all quite high-carb due to their high lactose and relatively low fat content. Cream is OK because basically it's milk fat - which is why it rises to the top of the milk in old-fashioned milk bottles. You can see this from the labels - "full fat" milk is 3.6 - 4% fat, Jersey Gold and Greek yoghurt are 10%, double cream is 50% or more.I would never have thought of milk as raising BG or being high in carbs I though all dairy was ok as the ones doing LCHF have a lot of full fat dairy but I don't understand how cream is better when that is made from milk.
Hello Jude.
My big morning cup of coffee is so important to me! I used to whisk hot milk to go with it, but now know milk (skimmed or semi) is quite high in carbs, so . . .
I suggest trying cream which should keep blood sugar down much better than milk as it has less carbs and the fat helps too.
I've tried soya milk, but it curdles and tastes bad to me.
A less widely available (and more expensive) alternative low carb solution is almond milk, but you need to read packets carefully as several contain sugar. It's quite nice and also a good alternative with cereals.
But the cream is really luxurious tasting and sets the day off well for me!
Good luck,
Jane.
We are indeed different. 12 grams of (milk) sugar certainly is far too much for me! And I love the occasional glass of lukewarm milk or milk with my porridge but I can´t have neither milk nor porridge if I want to keep bg normal.The GI of whole milk is low, at 31. There are about 12 carbs in 250ml so the glycemic load of that amount is very low at 3.7. (Anything under 10 is low). Apart from any lactose intolerance, it shouldn't spike...... But everyone's metabolism is different!
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