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Newly diagnosed and confused

When you do get to see the DN be wary of advice to eat lots of carbs; or "we recommend carbs at every meal"; or "you can eat porridge" (60% carbs); or you should eat low fat yoghurt (higher carbs than full fat).
When you test before meals and two hours afterwards you will know if the advice was right - it isn't.
 
Read the nutrition labels on food packets too. Aim for 5g carbs/100g or less.
 
Carbs - and both those cereals are too high.
 
If you go back to post 4 of this thread @AM1874 has suggested the popular meters on the forum and how to purchase.
 
I'll let the debate start on this, BUT, I'd say its the sugars you want to look out for on packaging... Carbs get turned into sugar in the body, but sugar are already sugar so it goes straight in...
The sugar noted on the packaging is not normally glucose but a combination of more complex sugars which need to be processed by the body to obtain the glucose in the blood. As an example, table sugar is sucrose which is a combination of glucose and fructose. Glucose has a GI of 100 but fructose only has a GI of 19 which slows down the absorption of sucrose and gives it a GI of 65. Note that mashed potato has a GI of about 85 so it can affect blood glucose more quickly than table sugar.
Most of us on here ignore the "of which sugar" and just go by the total carbs.
 


Bottom line - I never look at sugar content on labels now; I only look at carbohydrates - they amount to the same thing as far as my body is concerned. I found it difficult to give up cereal as I used to have it every day. I searched in vain for anything with a lower carb count than certain makers' bran flakes. I hate porridge (and its hardly low in carbs anyway...and some can cope with it and some can't). I managed to abandon it on realising that the average bowl of cereal has the same nutritional value as a cardboard but the sugar makes it taste better! My breakfast solution was Lidl protein rolls (which care low carb, tasty, cheap and freezable).
 
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