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Anyone here type 2 deabetic Do yo have any good recipes? >

Anyone here type 2 deabetic Do yo have any good recipes?

Anyone here type 2 deabetic Do yo have any good recipes?

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Old 09-10-2011, 04:49 PM
  #11  
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If you find any good ones let me know. Just dig. last May
Thanks
Mary Ellis
Originally Posted by sewgray
Need some good recipes that still taste like real food. Thanks
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Old 09-10-2011, 05:14 PM
  #12  
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ok i am also diabetic and this is what helps me, it is going to sound kinda strange but for some reason it helps me! Vitamin water zero lemonade flavor. It has zinc and magnesium which are helpful for diabetics. I drink one bottle a day and it helps with my cravings and I think it helps me knock off weight. Don't know why but it does. I didn't drink it for a long time but then about a month ago I started buying it again and i have noticed i am losing weight and I feel better. Strange huh? But it works for me so i will continue!
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Old 09-10-2011, 07:08 PM
  #13  
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Originally Posted by LouBert
I'm not advocating it for everyone, but it has worked for me. I'm 65 and am either sitting at my sewing machine or computer, so not much activity in my life. My husband found a 'study' online that I've adhered to for 12 weeks and lost 24 pounds. Stopped my Metformin (for Type 2) 12 weeks ago and eat 650 calories a day, my blood sugar was 187 and today it was 98. After a gastric bypass you only get 300 liquid calories a day. I eat very healthy, veges and fish/chicken, no sugar, no junk. Hope this helps someone else.
Could you share where to find the plan?
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Old 09-11-2011, 05:06 AM
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Originally Posted by madamekelly
Originally Posted by LouBert
I'm not advocating it for everyone, but it has worked for me. I'm 65 and am either sitting at my sewing machine or computer, so not much activity in my life. My husband found a 'study' online that I've adhered to for 12 weeks and lost 24 pounds. Stopped my Metformin (for Type 2) 12 weeks ago and eat 650 calories a day, my blood sugar was 187 and today it was 98. After a gastric bypass you only get 300 liquid calories a day. I eat very healthy, veges and fish/chicken, no sugar, no junk. Hope this helps someone else.
Could you share where to find the plan?
Be careful with this kind of diet and be sure to check with your dr. to get approval as it should be done only under doctor's supervision. For most people, diabetic or not, eating only 650 calories a day on a regular basis is a very dangerous thing to do. You must be concerned about getting enough nutrition every day and if you don't get that nutrition, it can lead to other serious medical problems. You may not even realize how too little nutrition can be affecting your blood, muscles, brain cells, internal organs, skin, eyesight - your whole body. That's why medical supervision is so necessary.

The most important thing a diabetic should be concerned with is limiting carbohydrate consumption to get blood glucose levels under control.

Your dr. will advise you if you need to lose weight and will direct the best way to do that. Not all diabetics are overweight, and losing weight may not be necessary or even advisable. Just by greatly reducing the carbs in your diet will necessarily reduce your calorie consumption . So allow your doctor and/or nutritionist to be your best guide for controlling diabetes with diet, exercise, medication, etc. It can be difficult to manage it alone and there is no one "magic" answer. What works for one may not work for another.
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Old 09-11-2011, 07:31 AM
  #15  
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Thank you all so much for your advice. I was just diagnosed a couple of days ago. This has been quite a month already. Diabetes diagnosis, my 68 birthday, and someone dumped a puppy in our apt. parking lot. A friend and I took him in and found a good home for him. He goes to the vet tomorrow, we are hoping for a good report.
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Old 09-12-2011, 03:03 PM
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The Dreamfields pasta sounded too good to be true, so I looked up some info about it. It doesn't really act any differently than regular pasta. Check out this website:

http://www.dietdoctor.com/the-dreamfields-pasta-fraud
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Old 09-13-2011, 05:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Carol's Quilts
Sewgray,

I've been a Type 2 diabetic for about 12 years. I have a bunch of diabetic cookbooks I never used because they are not really different from any other cookbook. They all seem to be just regular recipes, using regular pastas, flour, sugar, etc. What seems to qualify them as "diabetic" is portion size, meaning that each serving is rather small so that the individual portion has a reduced amount of carbs. Well, I can do that myself without having a special book to tell me how to divide a recipe!

The most important thing to remember is to count carbohydrate consumption. Ask your dr. to tell you how many carbs you may consume every day and if you stick pretty closely to that figure, you should be OK. My dr. told me that averaging your weekly carb consumption is more important than worrying about that one day you overdid it.

Low Carb Dreamfields Pasta (high fiber) as mentioned above really works. You can learn all about it at their website as listed in another post. I use their elbow macaroni to make mac and cheese and other macaroni-based casseroles. (Note: Be careful with milk and cheese - they contain more carbs than you might think because of the lactose [milk sugar] they contain.) I use Dreamfields fettucini instead of egg noodles to make tuna and noodles, chicken noodle casserole, I use any of their pastas as a side dish with gravy and roasted meats, etc. As Baloonatic says, this pasta cooks, looks and tastes just like any other pasta and no one will think it's anything different.

I never heard that the acid in tomato sauce removes the carb protection from Dreamfields if they are mixed together before refrigerating as Baloonatic mentioned. There is no such warning on their packaging, either. The carb protection comes from the addition of fiber to the pasta. It prevents the starches (carbs) from being absorbed by the body, rendering them non-digestible so they pass through the body without raising your blood sugar levels. But just because I never heard of it doesn't mean it's not true. Just check with Dreamfields Their toll-free number is 1-800-250-1917. If it is true, then you can choose not to mix them together, or don't let the diabetic in the family eat the leftovers the next day!

Avoid (or eat limited quantities occasionally) of any foods that end with "ose", i.e. sucrose, glucose, lactose, fructose, etc. They are all sugars.

Avoid starchy, sweet and white foods (potatoes, any kind or color of rice and flour), bread products, noodles, sugars, honey, sweet syrups, peas, corn, etc.

When you read labels, the sugar content is not as important as the total carbohydrate content. Remember that your body converts carbohydrates to sugar.

Don't be fooled by products commercially advertised as "sugar-free" or "low sugar", like cake and dessert mixes, baked goods, ice cream, etc. They all have other carbs and if you compare the "sugar" products with the "sugar-free" products, they may very well have no sugar in the ingredients but the total carb count will be so close as to hardly make a difference. In fact, sugar-free Cool Whip has 1 MORE carb than regular Cool Whip! You must be an avid label reader.

Occasionally, I decide I want to have dessert after dinner, so I will limit my carb intake all that day, and dinner will be a protein, 1-2 veggies, and salad - no bread, rolls, potatoes or rice, etc. Then have my dessert. (If it's cake, I'll just scrape off the icing. Other desserts I eat as they come. This never seems to affect my average sugar count for that day or that week. Note: I said occasionally!

My dr. recommends I eat an evening snack to help maintain glucose levels between dinner and the long fasting time before breakfast. She said if I eat a carb, combine it with some protein to keep everything on an even keel, such as peanut butter with crackers, half a tuna or other protein sandwich, fruit and cheese, etc. Works for me! I'm not sure why this works but since carbs are rapidly absorbed by the body and proteins are not, I assume that the proteins slow down the body's absorption of the carb so there is not a rapid rise in glocose levels.

Get yourself a carbohydrate gram counter (a small booklet), a glycemic index booklet (the lower the glycemic number, the better), plan your daily meals, and you'll find out that you can eat many of the foods you ate pre-diabetes without special cookbooks, the whole family can eat the same as they always did, and you can occasionally have some of your favorite high carb, high sugar foods if you plan a little. Again, the key word here is occasionally!

It won't be long before you won't have to check your little booklets very often.

I'm sorry this post is so long, but I hope it's been helpful. Good luck!
Thank you for the great info. I am on WW and not doing well at all. I am handicapped so activity very low. Son suggested counting carbs also. Will try to find the carb counter and glycemic index book.
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Old 09-13-2011, 09:34 AM
  #18  
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Originally Posted by VickyM
The Dreamfields pasta sounded too good to be true, so I looked up some info about it. It doesn't really act any differently than regular pasta. Check out this website:

http://www.dietdoctor.com/the-dreamfields-pasta-fraud
I didn't realize that there was such a big deal about Dreamfields. I checked out the website and all the comments. I am not a scientist, nutritionist, physician or any other kind of professional, just a Type 2 diabetic who tries to keep my blood glucose levels as close to normal as possible.

As many of the commenters said, do what works for you. Dreamfields works for me. I eat it maybe twice a month, not every day. My sugar never spikes when I eat it. My doctor says my diabetes is well-controlled. What more can I ask?

It's true that diabetics react differently to the same foods. For instance, my friend can eat all the rice she wants, but to me it's poison. You just have to find your own sensitivities, but I don't think there's a problem with someone trying Dreamfields for themselves to see how it works.

Regardless of the controversy, the research, the tests, claims of fraud, etc, I'll continue to eat Dreamfields as long as it keeps working for me and just let the experts continue arguing ad infinitum.
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Old 09-17-2011, 11:53 PM
  #19  
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[quote=sewgray]Thank you all so much for your advice. I was just diagnosed a couple of days ago.

Sorry you had to join the diabetic community. I know the feeling, I was diagnosed last summer while in the hospital, as if that wasn't enough to worry about. It's been a journey to figure out what I should & shouldn't eat but it's getting better. I mainly eat normally, only small portions. Watch carbs & don't waste them on soft drinks. Luckily, carbohydrate mg. are listed on all commercial foods.

Good luck
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