CookingZilla.com Forum Index
 
 FAQFAQ   SearchSearch   MemberlistMemberlist   UsergroupsUsergroups   RegisterRegister   ProfileProfile   Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages   Log inLog in 

Need portable diabetic snack ideas
Goto page 1, 2  Next
 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    CookingZilla.com Forum Index -> Diabetic
Author Message
Jennifer



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 64

PostPosted: Tue Jul 15, 2003 2:37 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

Barbara...

A couple of things.

His morning numbers are high because of the Dawn Phenomenon. Most T2s
suffer from it. I have a lovely long explanation, but to be honest, his
numbers are a bit high even for that.

What are his post meal numbers like?

Here's the advice I give all those trying to get control... and at the
end you'll find some snack ideas:

The single biggest question a diabetic has to answer is:

What do I eat?

Unfortunately, the answer is pretty confusing.

What confounds us all is the fact that different diabetics can get great
results on wildly different food plans. Some of us here achieve
great blood glucose control eating a high complex carbohydrate diet.
Others find that anything over 75 - 100g of carbs a day is too
much. Still others are somewhere in between.

At the beginning all of us felt frustrated. We wanted to be handed
THE way to eat, to ensure our continued health. But we all
learned that there is no one way. Each of us had to find our own path,
using the experience of those that went before, but still having
to discover for ourselves how OUR bodies and this disease were coexisting.

Ask questions, but remember each of us discovered on our own what works best
for us. You can use our experiences as jumping off points, but eventually
you'll work up a successful plan that is yours alone.

What you are looking to discover is how different foods affect you. As I'm
sure you've read, carbohydrates (sugars, wheat, rice... the things our
Grandmas called "starches") raise blood sugars the most rapidly. Protein
and fat do raise them, but not as high and much more slowly... so if you're
a T2, generally the insulin your body still makes may take care of the rise.

You might want to try some experiments.

First: Eat whatever you've been
currently eating... but write it all down.
Test yourself at the following times:

Upon waking (fasting)
1 hour after each meal
2 hours after each meal
At bedtime

That means 8 x each day. What you will discover by this is how long
after a meal your highest reading comes... and how fast you return to
"normal". Also, you may see that a meal that included bread, fruit or
other carbs gives you a higher reading.

Then for the next few days, try to curb your carbs. Eliminate breads,
cereals, rices, beans, any wheat products, potato, corn, fruit... get all
your carbs from veggies. Test at the same schedule above.

If you try this for a few days, you may find some pretty damn good
readings. It's worth a few days to discover.

Eventually you can slowly add back carbs until you see them affecting your
meter.

The thing about this disease... though we share much in common and we
need to
follow certain guidelines... in the end, each of our bodies dictate our
treatment and our success.

The closer we get to non-diabetic numbers, the greater chance we have of
avoiding horrible complications. The key here is AIM... I know that
everyone is at a different point in their disease... and it is progressive.
But, if we aim for the best numbers and do our best, we give ourselves the
best shot at heath we've got.
That's all we can do.

Here's my opinion on what numbers to aim for, they are non-diabetic numbers.

FBG under 110
One hour after meals under 140
Two hours after meals under 120

or for those in the mmol parts of the world:

Fasting Under 6
One hour after meals Under 8
Two hours after meals Under 6.5

Recent studies have indicated that the most important numbers are your
"after meal" numbers. They may be the most indicative of future
complications, especially heart problems.

Listen to your doctor, but you are the leader of your diabetic
care team. While his /her advice is learned, it is not absolute. You
will end up knowing much more about your body and how it's handling
diabetes than your doctor will. Your meter is your best weapon.

Just remember, we're not in a race or a competition with anyone but
ourselves... Play around with your food plan... TEST TEST TEST. Learn what
foods cause spikes, what foods cause cravings... Use your body as a science
experiment.

You'll read about a lot of different ways people use to control their
diabetes... Many are diametrically opposed. After awhile you'll learn that
there is no one size fits all around here. Take some time to experiment
and you'll soon discover the plan that works for you.

Now as for portable snacks:

Here's some of my faves, he may need to keep a small cooler with ice around:

String cheese
Sliced turkey, ham, any meats
Pickles
Macadamia nuts
Beef Jerky
Celery with flavored cream cheese
Cauliflower dipped in ranch dressing
Spicy walnuts (happy to post the recipe)


Jennifer




B Briggs wrote:
> My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
> diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
> often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
> We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
> that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating,
> or worse yet starving by the time he passes by the local
> burger joint and caves in to eating a hamburger and tater
> tots with (gasp) a banana milk shake. We are new to this
> and have begun home testing to try to get a grip. His
> morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
> Help!
>
> Thanks for any ideas
> Barbara
>
>

Archived from group: alt>food>diabetic
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
B Briggs



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 6

PostPosted: Tue Jul 15, 2003 7:11 pm    Post subject: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating,
or worse yet starving by the time he passes by the local
burger joint and caves in to eating a hamburger and tater
tots with (gasp) a banana milk shake. We are new to this
and have begun home testing to try to get a grip. His
morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
Help!

Thanks for any ideas
Barbara
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Julie Bove



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 106

PostPosted: Wed Jul 16, 2003 6:15 am    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

"B Briggs" wrote in message$Lk3.765@news02.roc.ny...
> My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
> diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
> often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
> We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
> that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating,
> or worse yet starving by the time he passes by the local
> burger joint and caves in to eating a hamburger and tater
> tots with (gasp) a banana milk shake. We are new to this
> and have begun home testing to try to get a grip. His
> morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
> Help!

Anything can be portable if you have a small cooler and some blue ice. I
always pack some sort of cheese and some raw veggies. Cottage cheese, tuna
and other salad, and various sandwiches can be put in a cooler. In some
areas you can buy little packages of hummus and flat bread. These are great
for a cooler. If you can't find those, you can package up your own. A
thermos can hold soup or other hot foods like chili or stew. Things that
don't need to be refrigerated are nuts, peanut butter sandwich or crackers
with peanut butter, packages of tuna salad and crackers (check the carb
count), small cans of green beans or other veggies, Vienna sausages, beef
jerky, pretzels, and fruit leather. Some of these things may or may not fit
into his eating plan. When I was pregnant and had GD, I was eating more
carbs. The fruit leather and pretzels were a must because I needed to eat
between meals so I wouldn't go hypo. This is less of a problem for me now.

I find that carbs are usually pretty easy to come by. Protein and veggies
are not always so easy. I should add that I'm not much of a meat eater. A
person who likes meat might have less of a problem finding decent sources of
protein. That's why I make sure to pack the protein and veggies so that I
have something to fall back on if need be. And I always carry some form of
carb in case I get a hypo. Currently, I have those large, individually
wrapped Lifesavers in my purse. 4 of them are all that's needed should a
hypo arise. I have 8 in there. Usually when I produce them, children
magically appear, wanting some too. That's why I have extras.

--
Type 2
http://users.bestweb.net/~jbove/
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
John Ferman



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Wed Jul 16, 2003 10:18 am    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

Get a copy of "16 Myths of the Diabetic Diet" published by the American
Diabetes Association. They also have a series of booklets "Month of
Meals" in the back of each a listing of 60-calorie and 120-calorie
snacks - some are more portable than others. 60 calories translates to
15 gram of carbohydrate (which is dubbed 'carb'). My diet plan target
allows 4 carbs at breakfast & lunch (60 gram carbohydrate), 5 at dinner
(75 grams carbohydrate) and 2 for snacks (30 grams carbohydrate). That
is 225 grams daily, amounting to 900 calories. My target diet is 50%
carbohydrates, making 1800 calories per day. The other 900 I split up
between protein and fats. Once you get the hang of it it becomes
easier, so just hang in there.


In article , Jennifer
wrote:

> Barbara...
>
> A couple of things.
>
> His morning numbers are high because of the Dawn Phenomenon. Most T2s
> suffer from it. I have a lovely long explanation, but to be honest, his
> numbers are a bit high even for that.
>
> What are his post meal numbers like?
>
> Here's the advice I give all those trying to get control... and at the
> end you'll find some snack ideas:
>
> The single biggest question a diabetic has to answer is:
>
> What do I eat?
>
> Unfortunately, the answer is pretty confusing.
>
> What confounds us all is the fact that different diabetics can get great
> results on wildly different food plans. Some of us here achieve
> great blood glucose control eating a high complex carbohydrate diet.
> Others find that anything over 75 - 100g of carbs a day is too
> much. Still others are somewhere in between.
>
> At the beginning all of us felt frustrated. We wanted to be handed
> THE way to eat, to ensure our continued health. But we all
> learned that there is no one way. Each of us had to find our own path,
> using the experience of those that went before, but still having
> to discover for ourselves how OUR bodies and this disease were coexisting.
>
> Ask questions, but remember each of us discovered on our own what works best
> for us. You can use our experiences as jumping off points, but eventually
> you'll work up a successful plan that is yours alone.
>
> What you are looking to discover is how different foods affect you. As I'm
> sure you've read, carbohydrates (sugars, wheat, rice... the things our
> Grandmas called "starches") raise blood sugars the most rapidly. Protein
> and fat do raise them, but not as high and much more slowly... so if you're
> a T2, generally the insulin your body still makes may take care of the rise.
>
> You might want to try some experiments.
>
> First: Eat whatever you've been
> currently eating... but write it all down.
> Test yourself at the following times:
>
> Upon waking (fasting)
> 1 hour after each meal
> 2 hours after each meal
> At bedtime
>
> That means 8 x each day. What you will discover by this is how long
> after a meal your highest reading comes... and how fast you return to
> "normal". Also, you may see that a meal that included bread, fruit or
> other carbs gives you a higher reading.
>
> Then for the next few days, try to curb your carbs. Eliminate breads,
> cereals, rices, beans, any wheat products, potato, corn, fruit... get all
> your carbs from veggies. Test at the same schedule above.
>
> If you try this for a few days, you may find some pretty damn good
> readings. It's worth a few days to discover.
>
> Eventually you can slowly add back carbs until you see them affecting your
> meter.
>
> The thing about this disease... though we share much in common and we
> need to
> follow certain guidelines... in the end, each of our bodies dictate our
> treatment and our success.
>
> The closer we get to non-diabetic numbers, the greater chance we have of
> avoiding horrible complications. The key here is AIM... I know that
> everyone is at a different point in their disease... and it is progressive.
> But, if we aim for the best numbers and do our best, we give ourselves the
> best shot at heath we've got.
> That's all we can do.
>
> Here's my opinion on what numbers to aim for, they are non-diabetic numbers.
>
> FBG under 110
> One hour after meals under 140
> Two hours after meals under 120
>
> or for those in the mmol parts of the world:
>
> Fasting Under 6
> One hour after meals Under 8
> Two hours after meals Under 6.5
>
> Recent studies have indicated that the most important numbers are your
> "after meal" numbers. They may be the most indicative of future
> complications, especially heart problems.
>
> Listen to your doctor, but you are the leader of your diabetic
> care team. While his /her advice is learned, it is not absolute. You
> will end up knowing much more about your body and how it's handling
> diabetes than your doctor will. Your meter is your best weapon.
>
> Just remember, we're not in a race or a competition with anyone but
> ourselves... Play around with your food plan... TEST TEST TEST. Learn what
> foods cause spikes, what foods cause cravings... Use your body as a science
> experiment.
>
> You'll read about a lot of different ways people use to control their
> diabetes... Many are diametrically opposed. After awhile you'll learn that
> there is no one size fits all around here. Take some time to experiment
> and you'll soon discover the plan that works for you.
>
> Now as for portable snacks:
>
> Here's some of my faves, he may need to keep a small cooler with ice around:
>
> String cheese
> Sliced turkey, ham, any meats
> Pickles
> Macadamia nuts
> Beef Jerky
> Celery with flavored cream cheese
> Cauliflower dipped in ranch dressing
> Spicy walnuts (happy to post the recipe)
>
>
> Jennifer
>
>
>
>
> B Briggs wrote:
> > My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> > with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
> > diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
> > often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> > comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
> > We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
> > that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> > available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating,
> > or worse yet starving by the time he passes by the local
> > burger joint and caves in to eating a hamburger and tater
> > tots with (gasp) a banana milk shake. We are new to this
> > and have begun home testing to try to get a grip. His
> > morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
> > Help!
> >
> > Thanks for any ideas
> > Barbara
> >
> >
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
K'neH'a'Iw



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 10

PostPosted: Wed Jul 16, 2003 5:44 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

B Briggs wrote:
> My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
> diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
> often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
> We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
> that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating

Here are some things I eat for snacks,

Mixed nuts,
Some commercial Beef Jerky, just watch the sugar content.
Any green vegetable and many others, I really like broccoli with a dip.
Tuna in a can or tuna salad. I make Tuna Cakes.
Hard boiled eggs, peel and eat.
Olives
Cheese
Humas as a dip with blue corn chips,
They seem to work better than the regular kind.

Most of this will keep without refrigeration at least for one day.

--
K'neH'a'Iw

Uncloaking, Sheilds up.
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
B Briggs



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 6

PostPosted: Wed Jul 16, 2003 6:40 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

"Jennifer" wrote in message@earthlink.net...
> Barbara...
>
> A couple of things.
>
> His morning numbers are high because of the Dawn
Phenomenon. Most T2s
> suffer from it. I have a lovely long explanation, but to
be honest, his
> numbers are a bit high even for that.
>
> What are his post meal numbers like?

We have just started testing and he won't test during the
day. But last night before bed and after dinner was still
over 200 however this morning under 180 (me 86). We are
keeping a food diary as best we can since the daytime is
still not organized " foodwise".

> What do I eat?
>
> Unfortunately, the answer is pretty confusing.
>
> What confounds us all is the fact that different diabetics
can get great
> results on wildly different food plans. Some of us here
achieve
> great blood glucose control eating a high complex
carbohydrate diet.
> Others find that anything over 75 - 100g of carbs a day is
too
> much. Still others are somewhere in between.

I am pretty sure that the carbs are a major problem but we
can't totally eliminate them, just not load up. Bye-bye
fettucini alfredo hello cracked wheat pilaf.

> At the beginning all of us felt frustrated.

No kidding. He feels "life as I know it is over". I said
no.... "that would be when you are on kidney dialysis, blind
and missing your fingers and toes, not just when you can't
have mashed potatoes and gravey."


snip good advice

Thanks for the advice. We are trying to get a handle on what
is ok and not ok to eat. Fortunately I love to cook and we
rarely buy anything that is prepacked so I can control the
ingredients.

>snip

> Here's my opinion on what numbers to aim for, they are
non-diabetic numbers.
>
> FBG under 110
> One hour after meals under 140
> Two hours after meals under 120
>
> or for those in the mmol parts of the world:
>
> Fasting Under 6
> One hour after meals Under 8
> Two hours after meals Under 6.5
>

> Now as for portable snacks:
>
> Here's some of my faves, he may need to keep a small
cooler with ice around:
>
> String cheese
> Sliced turkey, ham, any meats
> Pickles
> Macadamia nuts
> Beef Jerky
> Celery with flavored cream cheese
> Cauliflower dipped in ranch dressing
> Spicy walnuts (happy to post the recipe)
>
Thanks Barbara
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Julie Bove



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 106

PostPosted: Wed Jul 16, 2003 7:00 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

"John Ferman" wrote in message%ferma001@tc.umn.edu...
> Get a copy of "16 Myths of the Diabetic Diet" published by the American
> Diabetes Association. They also have a series of booklets "Month of
> Meals" in the back of each a listing of 60-calorie and 120-calorie
> snacks - some are more portable than others. 60 calories translates to
> 15 gram of carbohydrate (which is dubbed 'carb'). My diet plan target
> allows 4 carbs at breakfast & lunch (60 gram carbohydrate), 5 at dinner
> (75 grams carbohydrate) and 2 for snacks (30 grams carbohydrate). That
> is 225 grams daily, amounting to 900 calories. My target diet is 50%
> carbohydrates, making 1800 calories per day. The other 900 I split up
> between protein and fats. Once you get the hang of it it becomes
> easier, so just hang in there.

How are your numbers when you eat that many carbs? Mine would be through
the roof! I too eat 1800 calories per day. I eat more than 50% carbs and
yet I eat less carbs that you. Something isn't right.

--
Type 2
http://users.bestweb.net/~jbove/
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Priscilla Ballou



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 34

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2003 7:10 am    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

In article ,
"B Briggs" wrote:

> My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day time
> diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he is
> often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles away.
> We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable snacks
> that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> available so he doesn't end up going hours between eating,
> or worse yet starving by the time he passes by the local
> burger joint and caves in to eating a hamburger and tater
> tots with (gasp) a banana milk shake. We are new to this
> and have begun home testing to try to get a grip. His
> morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
> Help!

I keep jars of peanuts and roasted mixed nuts on my desk for when the
hungries hit.

Priscilla
--
Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum,
minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
(thanks be to topfive.com)
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
B Briggs



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 6

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2003 7:27 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

"K'neH'a'Iw" wrote in message@corp.supernews.com...
> B Briggs wrote:
> > My husband is trying to control his blood sugar readings
> > with diet, but we are having a hard time with the day
time
> > diet. We live in a rural area and when he his working he
is
> > often away from anyplace to stop and eat. If he can, he
> > comes home for a good lunch but often he is many miles
away.
> > We need some ideas for some good, tasty and portable
snacks
> > that he can keep in his work truck that will be easily
> > available so he doesn't end up going hours between
eating
>
> Here are some things I eat for snacks,
>
> Mixed nuts,
> Some commercial Beef Jerky, just watch the sugar content.
> Any green vegetable and many others, I really like
broccoli with a dip.
> Tuna in a can or tuna salad. I make Tuna Cakes.
> Hard boiled eggs, peel and eat.
> Olives
> Cheese
> Humas as a dip with blue corn chips,
> They seem to work better than the regular kind.
>
> Most of this will keep without refrigeration at least for
one day.

Those all sound good and are something my husband "will"
eat. Especially the beef jerky.

Thanks
Barbara
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Jesse Spencer



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 1

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2003 8:14 am    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

His
> morning numbers are over 190, while mine are low 80 or less.
> Help!
>
> Thanks for any ideas
> Barbara

I like glucerna bars...walmart...1.49
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Jennifer



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 64

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2003 2:22 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

Those are GREAT meals... and make me want to come over for dinner!

I'm guessing if he keeps his food like that he'll begin to see better
numbers much more often.

Add in some exercise and he'll be on the road to a long healthy diabetic
life!

Jennifer



B Briggs wrote:
> "Quentin Grady" wrote in message
> @4ax.com...
>
>>This post not CC'd by email
>> On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 14:11:04 GMT, "B Briggs"
>
>
>
>>wrote:
>>snip my post
>>
>>G'day G'day Barbara,
>>
>> You don't say whether your husband is T2 or T1. These
>
> are two
>
>>different ball games. The dietary rules are about as
>
> similar as those
>
>>for basket ball and base ball.
>
>
> He is T2. His family has a history of diabetes and his
> grandfather died of pancreatic cancer (drank heavily) so we
> are taking this turn of events very seriously.
>
>
>> Something I found useful was raw almonds with a few dried
>
> apricots.
>
>>Almonds are very low in carb, supply vegetable protein
>
> containing high
>
>>levels of arginine and the mineral magnesium which reduces
>
> the
>
>>incidence of ischemic heart attack. Some people worry
>
> themselves over
>
>>most anything and get concerned that the fats will raise
>
> cholesterol.
>
>>In this instance recent research shows quite the contrary;
>
> eating
>
>>almonds actually reduces cholesterol levels. Since your
>
> husband has
>
>>high blood glucose levels more or less continuously then
>
> he will be
>
>>passing a lot of magnesium in his urine. This is not a
>
> good thing as
>
>>it makes the heart more twitchy. Dried apricot have a low
>
> glycemic
>
>>index which means although apricots are high in
>
> carbohydrate their
>
>>affect on blood glucose is surprisingly mild. Dried
>
> apricots are high
>
>>in potassium and boron. Boron is good for blokes. It
>
> helps reduce
>
>>the incidence of prostate cancer. Whatever. Almonds
>
> with few dried
>
>>apricots keep well. I used to carry them around in a
>
> resealable
>
>>sandwich bag in my pocket without them deteriorating.
>
>
> Wonderful! We live in California land of apricots and
> almonds.
>
>
>>Good to see you giving him a rev up with your life isn't
>
> over speech.
>
>>It sure ain't. In fact there is a high chance if he
>
> responds to this
>
>>wake up call that he will emerge healthier than before.
>
>
> Yes he needs a bit of encouragment, however I don't want to
> become the food and blood testing police. Smile So far just
> a few weeks of changing diets, snacking during the day and
> trying to exercise more have helped his numbers. We were
> thrilled to see a reading of 129 after dinner last night.
> (Green salad with poached prawns, broccoli and cauliflower
> bits,olives, baby carrots, avocado and sliced egg, with
> vinegarette dressing and a bit of parmesan cheese. Club soda
> with freshly squeezed lime over ice. Dessert sliced
> strawberries sweetened with splenda and cream.) As a good
> aside, I am also losing some weight and feeing better.
>
> Todays food: Give me feedback if this is not good diabetic
> eating.
> Breakfast: Omelete with avocado, shrimp and parmesan cheese
> (left over from the last night salad) and the rest of the
> sliced strawberries, small glass of v-8
>
> Lunch: my best guess since I am at work also Baked mustard
> herbed chicken breast (also left over) with
> cauliflower,carrots and broccoli dipped in a mayo/ranch
> dressing. Diet grapefruit soda.
>
> Dinner. Stir fry beef (top round) with red bell pepper,
> broccoli, onions, mushrooms, sweet peas over brown rice.
> Dessert: cubed cantelope and bing cherries.
>
> Thanks for the support
>
> Barbara
>
>
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Jennifer



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 64

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2003 2:23 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

Quentin Grady wrote:
> This post not CC'd by email
> On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 09:37:01 -0700, Jennifer
> wrote:
>
>
>>His morning numbers are high because of the Dawn Phenomenon. Most T2s
>>suffer from it. I have a lovely long explanation, but to be honest, his
>>numbers are a bit high even for that.
>
>
> G'day G'day Jennifer,
>
> He might just be wildly out of control.
>
> Best wishes,


That's what I was intimating...

I guess I need to be more direct ; )


Jennifer
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Colleen



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 25

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2003 6:55 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

These are great food choices. You're getting the hang of this.
c

"B Briggs" wrote in message$RL4.1814@news02.roc.ny...
>
> "Quentin Grady" wrote in message
> @4ax.com...
> > This post not CC'd by email
> > On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 14:11:04 GMT, "B Briggs"
>
> > wrote:
> >snip my post
> >
> > G'day G'day Barbara,
> >
> > You don't say whether your husband is T2 or T1. These
> are two
> > different ball games. The dietary rules are about as
> similar as those
> > for basket ball and base ball.
>
> He is T2. His family has a history of diabetes and his
> grandfather died of pancreatic cancer (drank heavily) so we
> are taking this turn of events very seriously.
>
> > Something I found useful was raw almonds with a few dried
> apricots.
> > Almonds are very low in carb, supply vegetable protein
> containing high
> > levels of arginine and the mineral magnesium which reduces
> the
> > incidence of ischemic heart attack. Some people worry
> themselves over
> > most anything and get concerned that the fats will raise
> cholesterol.
> > In this instance recent research shows quite the contrary;
> eating
> > almonds actually reduces cholesterol levels. Since your
> husband has
> > high blood glucose levels more or less continuously then
> he will be
> > passing a lot of magnesium in his urine. This is not a
> good thing as
> > it makes the heart more twitchy. Dried apricot have a low
> glycemic
> > index which means although apricots are high in
> carbohydrate their
> > affect on blood glucose is surprisingly mild. Dried
> apricots are high
> > in potassium and boron. Boron is good for blokes. It
> helps reduce
> > the incidence of prostate cancer. Whatever. Almonds
> with few dried
> > apricots keep well. I used to carry them around in a
> resealable
> > sandwich bag in my pocket without them deteriorating.
>
> Wonderful! We live in California land of apricots and
> almonds.
>
> > Good to see you giving him a rev up with your life isn't
> over speech.
> > It sure ain't. In fact there is a high chance if he
> responds to this
> > wake up call that he will emerge healthier than before.
>
> Yes he needs a bit of encouragment, however I don't want to
> become the food and blood testing police. Smile So far just
> a few weeks of changing diets, snacking during the day and
> trying to exercise more have helped his numbers. We were
> thrilled to see a reading of 129 after dinner last night.
> (Green salad with poached prawns, broccoli and cauliflower
> bits,olives, baby carrots, avocado and sliced egg, with
> vinegarette dressing and a bit of parmesan cheese. Club soda
> with freshly squeezed lime over ice. Dessert sliced
> strawberries sweetened with splenda and cream.) As a good
> aside, I am also losing some weight and feeing better.
>
> Todays food: Give me feedback if this is not good diabetic
> eating.
> Breakfast: Omelete with avocado, shrimp and parmesan cheese
> (left over from the last night salad) and the rest of the
> sliced strawberries, small glass of v-8
>
> Lunch: my best guess since I am at work also Baked mustard
> herbed chicken breast (also left over) with
> cauliflower,carrots and broccoli dipped in a mayo/ranch
> dressing. Diet grapefruit soda.
>
> Dinner. Stir fry beef (top round) with red bell pepper,
> broccoli, onions, mushrooms, sweet peas over brown rice.
> Dessert: cubed cantelope and bing cherries.
>
> Thanks for the support
>
> Barbara
>
>
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
B Briggs



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 6

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2003 7:10 pm    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

"Quentin Grady" wrote in message@4ax.com...
> This post not CC'd by email
> On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 14:11:04 GMT, "B Briggs"

> wrote:
>snip my post
>
> G'day G'day Barbara,
>
> You don't say whether your husband is T2 or T1. These
are two
> different ball games. The dietary rules are about as
similar as those
> for basket ball and base ball.

He is T2. His family has a history of diabetes and his
grandfather died of pancreatic cancer (drank heavily) so we
are taking this turn of events very seriously.

> Something I found useful was raw almonds with a few dried
apricots.
> Almonds are very low in carb, supply vegetable protein
containing high
> levels of arginine and the mineral magnesium which reduces
the
> incidence of ischemic heart attack. Some people worry
themselves over
> most anything and get concerned that the fats will raise
cholesterol.
> In this instance recent research shows quite the contrary;
eating
> almonds actually reduces cholesterol levels. Since your
husband has
> high blood glucose levels more or less continuously then
he will be
> passing a lot of magnesium in his urine. This is not a
good thing as
> it makes the heart more twitchy. Dried apricot have a low
glycemic
> index which means although apricots are high in
carbohydrate their
> affect on blood glucose is surprisingly mild. Dried
apricots are high
> in potassium and boron. Boron is good for blokes. It
helps reduce
> the incidence of prostate cancer. Whatever. Almonds
with few dried
> apricots keep well. I used to carry them around in a
resealable
> sandwich bag in my pocket without them deteriorating.

Wonderful! We live in California land of apricots and
almonds.

> Good to see you giving him a rev up with your life isn't
over speech.
> It sure ain't. In fact there is a high chance if he
responds to this
> wake up call that he will emerge healthier than before.

Yes he needs a bit of encouragment, however I don't want to
become the food and blood testing police. Smile So far just
a few weeks of changing diets, snacking during the day and
trying to exercise more have helped his numbers. We were
thrilled to see a reading of 129 after dinner last night.
(Green salad with poached prawns, broccoli and cauliflower
bits,olives, baby carrots, avocado and sliced egg, with
vinegarette dressing and a bit of parmesan cheese. Club soda
with freshly squeezed lime over ice. Dessert sliced
strawberries sweetened with splenda and cream.) As a good
aside, I am also losing some weight and feeing better.

Todays food: Give me feedback if this is not good diabetic
eating.
Breakfast: Omelete with avocado, shrimp and parmesan cheese
(left over from the last night salad) and the rest of the
sliced strawberries, small glass of v-8

Lunch: my best guess since I am at work also Baked mustard
herbed chicken breast (also left over) with
cauliflower,carrots and broccoli dipped in a mayo/ranch
dressing. Diet grapefruit soda.

Dinner. Stir fry beef (top round) with red bell pepper,
broccoli, onions, mushrooms, sweet peas over brown rice.
Dessert: cubed cantelope and bing cherries.

Thanks for the support

Barbara
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Quentin Grady



Joined: 26 Jul 2007
Posts: 13

PostPosted: Sat Jul 19, 2003 1:08 am    Post subject: Re: Need portable diabetic snack ideas Reply with quote

This post not CC'd by email
On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 09:37:01 -0700, Jennifer
wrote:

>His morning numbers are high because of the Dawn Phenomenon. Most T2s
>suffer from it. I have a lovely long explanation, but to be honest, his
>numbers are a bit high even for that.

G'day G'day Jennifer,

He might just be wildly out of control.

Best wishes,

--
Quentin Grady ^ ^ /
New Zealand, >#,#< [
/ \ /\
"... and the blind dog was leading."

http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/quentin

Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    CookingZilla.com Forum Index -> Diabetic All times are GMT
Goto page 1, 2  Next
Page 1 of 2

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group