OMG I say after reading what
@Indy51's links under heading 'Diabetes are carb intolerant' page 13. Thank you for those links I learned a lot.
I better educate myself of facts before trying high carbs. I understand that being on LCHF insulin resistance is greater now.
@AndBreathe, if you dont mind please let me know what your diet is like? I noticed your FBS is 3' and 4's which is great.
Things are not so simple, Understand we are all different= Read read read today.
Thank you all
Firstly, I agree with the last post by
@Indy51 too. I'd be cautious on the unique statement, but some of us have had great pay offs from the hard yards we're all travelling.
My diet isn't as adventurous as,
@Andrew Colvin . I'm not that courageous! But, I seem to do OK.
Breakfast is usually c40g raw rolled oats, a spoonful of oat bran, and milk. Sometimes, I'll have bacon or scrambled eggs, and on a Sunday, we often breakfast with friends which means she (American) cooks, so it has recently been: Waffles with bacon, frittata, bacon sandwiches and tomorrow, it will allegedly be buckwheat pancakes. These have all been eaten in the name of science, obviously.
Lunch is usually oily fish, so mackerel or sardines, with some rocket or any other salad we have around. And I've added some nuts to take on some more calories in the mid part of the day.
Dinner can be steak, pork chop or chicken with salad, then more recent examples would be paella, using proper paella rice, beef rendang, again with rice, or noodles. Baked potato with various fillings, although the baked spud sent my numbers to the limit of my comfort zone (which is still very much in the acceptable range), chilli. I don't have anything sweet, but that's no change from my pre-d days. Ice cream might have been an occasional indulgence, but we're talking less than monthly.
I'm still not carb heavy, but having more carb with my main meals. It all helps with flexibility and fitting around others.
As a matter of (probably no) interest, we had bacon, cheesy omelette and baked beans for dinner last night - we were in a rush, and hungry. I was 3.9 before and 3.7 after, so no harm there. This morning I was 4.5, which is almost unheard of for me, but I think that's the result of a broken nights sleep, and almost falling over when I got out of bed. Don't ask! So, perhaps, already slightly elevated by the poor sleep plus an adrenalin liver dump as I staggered to regain control of my limbs. Not an image I'd ask you to hold in your head.