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Newly diagnosed looking for advice

They also do noodles substitute and spaghetti made from the same stuff.

I am a big fan of courgetti spaghetti - spiralise courgettes, sprinkle a bit of salt and leave them in a colander to drain for 10 minutes, fry in olive oil for a couple of minutes. Looks like pasta and has very similar texture, taste great.
 
I am a big fan of courgetti spaghetti - spiralise courgettes, sprinkle a bit of salt and leave them in a colander to drain for 10 minutes, fry in olive oil for a couple of minutes. Looks like pasta and has very similar texture, taste great.

I too am a big fan of courgetti I have it with things like omelette. No longer do the salt thing though. Just spiralise and go.
At the beginning of my lower carb journey (Type 1 trying for better control) I dismissed cauliflower rice/courgetti. However would not thank you for potatoes now, and mix courgetti and pre cooked and reheated wholewheat spaghetti half and half. My absolute favourite is cauliflower mash with Parmesan. Goes with everything. Buy two fresh ones a week.
My point is don’t dismiss anything. @T2 Woman give it a go.
 
I really like cauliflower mash, as long as it’s got tons of cream and butter and garlic and Parmesan in it.

I know it sounds odd but I also have spiralised turnips. They come out very well because they’re a bit more robust than courgettes, are white of course so look just like spaghetti. Boil for about 2 mins (or stir fry). They are basically like spaghetti or ramen but with a slightly peppery taste.
 
Welcome to the forum. You need to get and use a meter, which will tell you which foods do what to your blood glucose levels. On how many carbs? personally I am on around 20g carbs/day and after two years have reduced my BGs to 36-38, lowered my total cholesterol (not that that means much, everything else in range) and lost >20kg,

Best of luck.
 

I had chronic diarrhoea caused by bile salt malabsorption for years after I had my gall bladder out in 2000, I took Questran for most of that time, although it never reliably worked. I went low carb as soon as I was diagnosed T2 in 2017 and very quickly I became constipated! So I have had to up my fibre intake whilst keeping low carb. I’d be interested to hear how going LC helps you in that department too?
 
I get lower carb wraps from sainsburys in the free from section. they are called Bfree. 4g carbs per wrap and £3 per pack if 4.

there is also an online company called lo dough which make an even lower calorie wrap, more expensive but good as a pizza base. They make a low carb vanilla sponge mix which with some different flavourings can make lots of different cakes and muffins.

I find cauli rice is ok with chilli, but I don’t bother with curry. I found a low carb naan bread recipe which is nice instead. For me morrisons frozen sachets taste the best, and they are individual portions which is helpful.
 
I loathe cauliflower rice - I've tried a couple of brands - so now I just have cauliflower or broccoli in place of the rice or pasta that the menfolk have.

Last night I made sausage, mashed potatoes, veg and gravy - they had mashed potato I had extra cauliflower, broccoli and cabbage. Mainly when cooking for all of us I add green/above ground veggies and have those instead of the pasta/rice/potatoes that they have.
 
very quickly I became constipated! So I have had to up my fibre intake whilst keeping low carb.
I used to find psyllium husk helped a lot with my chronic low carb constipation, but I have trouble finding acceptable ways to consume it, so for the moment I have given up on psyllium. I did notice the difference for the worse. Now I have started taking one T collagen powder daily in the hope of strengthening my bones. (Recently diagnosed with osteopoenia.) To my surprise and delight, that has made a big improvement to my constipation. At present, I add one T collagen powder to my linseed fritter mix. However I see no reason it could not be added to chia pudding or lc muesli.
 
I loathe cauliflower rice - I've tried a couple of brands - so now I just have cauliflower or broccoli in place of the rice or pasta that the menfolk have.
I believe the smaller a food is chopped or ground, the faster it will raise bg. So sprigs of cauliflower are slightly more diabetes friendly than cauliflower rice. Like @Widgets I like the taste of them better too.
 

I agree about psyllium, I add 1/2 a tablespoon to my low carb coconut porridge every day, where the recipe only calls for a pinch. Luckily it doesn’t affect the taste or consistency. I also add a teaspoon of inulin powder to my afternoon coffee.

Anyway, back on topic, I use courgette as a sub for pasta for bolognese, I used to spiralised it but found it a faff, so I just slice and fry it these days.
 
I had my gall bladder removed after gallstones 31 years ago and have had bile salt malabsorption diahorroea ever since. I used to take Questran too which was pretty unreliable but now take cholestagel tablets as a substitute when global supply issues hit Questran. Neither are great for me so it’s just something I have to live with. Now doing lower carbs I am varying between constipation and the usual deluges, so when I reduce carbs a lot more I hope it doesn’t get worse. I am eating lots of veg, so hopefully!
 
Hi Rustypin. I skipped breakfast today and went straight for lunch so I could get rid of those weetabix carbs. I only ate them as a “must have breakfast” thing. I’m not that fussed on them and they certainly don’t fill me up. I just can’t face having heavy fat breakfasts early in the morning. Leaves me a bit more for later. Otherwise I’ll do the yoghurt thing. Taking on board everyone’s advice and counting my calories now too that I will start reducing if I don’t start shifting some weight with the low carb option. Thanks so much for your input. It’s all helping me a lot!
 
For those who tend to get constipated, an alternative is vitamin C powder taken in a glass of water. Just use a tip of a teaspoonful to start with (it has a pleasant lemony taste) as what happens is your body takes what it needs and excretes the rest. If you take too much, it can be spectacular! But once you know your dose,there's no problem at all.
 
Hi Poursomesugaronme1682. Cool name! Sounds like you are a pretty similar profile to me. My Christmas day and Boxing day were certainly very restrained! Sounds like you are lucky and got some decent advice. I hope to get the same and really want a meter and test strips on prescription but if not I’ll be buying one as soon as I get back from my appointment. Seems from the advice on here it’s the only way to get proper control of it. I am upset to be going through it. It is major change for me, but I needed a shock and this certainly gave me it. Apart from the sugar reduction my other goal is a good weight loss so I’m gonna give it my best shot. How are you feeling about it all? Do you have much weight to lose? I don’t even know how much I weigh. I’m too scared to get on the scales so this appointment no doubt will be truly shocking for me. The kick up the behind I need. I wear size 18 jeans and am bigger on top as I have big boobs but I carry a lot of the worst visceral fat around my middle which is the worst kind so hoping to shift that. Hoping for New Year, new me!
 
Protein is a great appetite suppressant, so a couple of boiled eggs for breakfast (whenever you have it) will make you feel much better than Weetabix or similar, once you acclimatise, and leave your blood glucose untouched. I've taken to avocados in the morning too - no effect on blood glucose and carrying plenty of fibre. And I recently discovered milk in my tea has a shocking effect on the blood glucose. So I make coffee with full cream, which has almost none.
Good luck with it.
 
I recently discovered milk in my tea has a shocking effect on the blood glucose. So I make coffee with full cream
Yes, having very much enjoyed cream in my coffee in my careless youth, I conscientiously gave up the cream in my "health" conscious maturity. Re-discovering real coffee with real double cream and without guilt has been one of the consolations of my current low carb diet. I also put double cream in my tea. Nowadays this is unusual, but in Victorian novels the upper classes always offered guests cream in their tea. I imagine they pitied the poorer folk who could only afford milk.
 
One of my great grandmothers worked as a housemaid and one of her tasks was to take the cream off the milk - it was poured into a cream pan and left overnight, and then deliver the skimmed milk to the kitchen and put the cream in the larder. The skimmed milk was used to make bread and puddings for the servants.
 
I went the other way - black tea. But I love it in the coffee. Good luck
 
For those who tend to get constipated, an alternative is vitamin C powder taken in a glass of water
@Outlier Thanks for the tip! I already like vitamin C powder better than tablets, as one gets only the vitamin one wants without being forced to swallow unwelcome bulking agents. Since starting to watch my carbs, I read labels and I am shocked and frustrated to see how much maize starch, dextrose (not to mention colouring) etc are forced on me in vitamin/mineral pills and even prescription meds. One little pill might seem trivial, but in my case it is 4 meds twice daily, probably for the rest of my life.
 
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