Sugar in Fruit

Sugar-in-fruit-webgraphicWe do love a good infographic here at The Diabetes Diet – and this one by Zoe Harcombe caught our eye…

If you are following a low carbohydrate diet to improve your blood sugar control, then fruit is something you need to treat with caution.

You can eat fruit as part of a low-carbohydrate diet, but in moderation (one to two portions a day) and certain fruits are better than others, such as berries. It’s also best to eat fruits after you’ve eaten your meal as this will slow down the absorption of the sugar in them.

If you choose not to eat fruit at all, there are plenty of nutrients and fibre in vegetables – red peppers are an amazing source of Vitamin C, for example – so you won’t be missing out on anything.

Beanz Meanz #&!<Z! What are FODMAPS anyway?

For many of us gastric distress is just intermittent but for others it is a constant source of discomfort, embarrassment and sometimes even pain. There are fermentable sugars released from various foodstuffs that increase the amount of wind generated in the gut. It is the distention of the gut by the wind that sometimes causes the bloating, discomfort and pain. And of course the gas has to go somewhere. 

When it comes to gassy foods there is a variation depending on the type and amount of fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols in the food. You can cut down on high FODMAP food and eat low FODMAP food instead to see if this settles your guts down.

Vegetables, beans, pulses and legumes are probably the most well- known culprits.  

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Of the vegetables artichokes, asparagus, beetroot, broccoli, Brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, fennel, green beans, garlic, mushrooms, okra, onions, peppers, snow peas and squash top the list. This is a pity because many of these feature highly in low carb diets and also improve the taste of many dishes. 

For vegetables that are better tolerated try,  bean sprouts, bok choy, peppers with the skin removed (by searing and them removing), carrots, celery, cucumber, corn, aubergines, lettuce, leafy greens, pumkin, potatoes, tomatoes, courgettes and all fresh herbs. ( eat very sparingly or not at all on a low carb diet)

Some people don’t deal with lactose very well and for these people ice cream, milk, soft cheeses, yoghurt and cream may cause problems. Lactose free dairy products and hard cheeses don’t cause difficulty.

 Of the cereal group wheat products and rye may cause problems whereas spelt, gluten free bread products, rice, rice based breakfast cereals, quinoa and gluten free pasta may not.

Fruit tends not to aggravate the guts as much as vegetables but for some people avocado, apples, apricots, cherries, dates, dried fruits, figs, mango, nectarines, papaya, peaches, pears, plums, prunes and watermelon may give problems.  The lower FODMAP items in this class are bananas, berries, cantaloupe melon, grapes, grapefruit, honeydew melon, kiwi, lime, passion fruit, pineapple, rhubarb and citrus fruits.

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Food additives end to upset people especially the polyols in artificial sweeteners and foods with high fructose corn syrup or agave syrup.  Chutneys, pickles, coconut, honey and jams can also cause problems. Thankfully most spices and herbs, mayonnaise, olives, onion powder, olive oil, pepper, salt, maple syrup, mustard, wheat free soy sauce, chilli sauce, sugar and vinegars are better tolerated.

I found that my guts under went a great improvement from stopping wheat and adopting a low carb diet. I do bake and use polyols to sweeten baking products in preference to sugars. The main thing to remember is that many of the effects are dose dependent, so limit your intake accordingly.

 

Based in Irritable Bowel Syndrome: new and emerging treatments. BMJ 27 June 2015.

Tiramisu

You CAN have a marvellous dessert for Christmas or any other day you like! I’ve made  low carb tiramisu in many different versions over the years and here is just one. We will be having this for Christmas dinner, which we always have in the evening, because I usually work Christmas day. If you can keep your hands off of it, you can make this a day ahead of the event.

First of all make your sponge. You can use olive oil or coconut oil for the oil, and you can add cocoa powder, about two  rounded dessertspoons for each cake,  if you like a chocolate sponge on your tiramisu. Although this recipe makes one sponge, I strongly suggest you make two, because everyone wants seconds of this dessert.  You can use the second one for another batch of tiramisu or use it for a regular low carb sponge.P1030199.JPG
2 large eggs, separated
60ml double cream
2 tablespoons of granular sugar substitute of your choice
50g very soft or melted butter (or other oil)
pinch of salt
120mg ground almonds
1 teaspoon baking powder
Preheat oven to 170C/mk 4
In a large bowl, mix together yolks,  butter, cream, granular sugar substitute and salt. Add  in almonds and baking powder.
In a separate bowl, beat egg whites till in soft peaks, fold in a large spoonful to cake mix to loosen it, then gently fold in rest of egg whites as this adds lightness to the sponge.

Put the oven for 25 minutes approximately. The cake is done when a cocktail stick comes out almost dry or the top springs back when gently pressed.

Disaronno_Originale_2

Now for the filling.

Separate 6 eggs. Beat the yolks with about 3 heaped tablespoons of granular sugar substitute. ( My combination is 2 xylitol + 1 splenda )

Add 500g mascarpone and some Amaretto or Kahlua or Tia Maria. Whip.

In a jug put 250mls of cooled strong coffee (preferably real) and ¼ cup brandy or rum or Kahlua or Tia Maria.

Whip the egg whites and then when stiff fold them into the boozy/cheese mixture.

Now in a fancy bowl put in a layer of sponge cut up. Dribble over the coffee mixture till wet but not disintegrating.

Then add a good layer of boozy custard.

Keep on till you have a layer of boozy custard on top.

Put chocolate shavings (crushed up flake = 15g carb per flake )or cocoa powder on top(less carby)

Put it in the fridge for at least 2 hours before serving to chill.

This keeps for a few days, if you can keep your hands off of it.

 

 

Make your basil plants last longer

 

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The Observer’s gardening correspondent James Wong has a great idea to keep your supermarket basil plant thrive.

As soon as you get it home, take the plant out of the container and divide the root ball into four. Cut away any weakling stems at soil level, leaving about 5 strong stems for each quarter plant. Plant each new clump in a good sized pot in John Innes number 2 compost or similar.

Water generously and place in a sunny sheltered spot on a windowsill or green house and let them grow.

Two of my favourite basil recipes are Caprese Salad, with mozzarella, tomatoes, basil, olive oil and balsamic vinegar and tomato and basil soup. Do you have any others you would like to contribute?

 

Caprese-1 (1)

African Lamb Stew

AubergineINGREDIENTS

1.2 kg of lamb stew meat

2 aubergines

1 ½ teaspoons sea salt

1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

2 tins of chopped tomatoes

1 tablespoon coriander seeds

½ tsp cumin seeds

2 tsp grated nutmeg

3 tablespoons oil

3 pcs red chilli finely chopped

2 tablespoons grated fresh ginger

5 cloves of garlic

1 teaspoon vinegar

1 stock cube

sour cream

2 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley

1 tablespoon chopped coriander leaves

 

METHOD

Crush the coriander seeds and cumin seeds, using a mortar and pestle (or if you don’t own a mortar and pestle you can put seeds in a plastic food bag or cling film and use a rolling pin to crush the seeds.)

Mix crushed seeds with salt and nutmeg and rub spice mixture well into the meat.
Melt oil/butter (I always use both, gives a lovely flavour, the oil stops the butter from burning), add meat to the pan and brown on all sides. Cut the aubergine into cubes and fry with the meat for 2 minutes whilst stirring all the time.
Add the ginger and chilli and let everything cook for a further 2 minutes, then add add the garlic, vinegar, stock cube and tomatoes. Cover and simmer for 1 hour.

Season with salt and pepper. Serve up in deep plates, place a big dollop of sour cream on top and sprinkle with the fresh finely chopped parsley and coriander to finish.

Happy Thanksgiving!

thanksgivingWe have a sizeable American audience so Happy Thanksgiving if you’re celebrating the occasion with your friends and family today.

Thanksgiving means… well, a lot of food of course and a lot of carb-laden options.

Candied yams, pumpkin pies and stuffings made with breadcrumbs etc.

Of course, you can’t be perfect all the time when trying to stick to a low-carbohydrate diet, but if you do want some low-carb versions of your favourites, here they are…

Butternut Squash Soup – a favourite starter made lower-carb by the good folks at Atkins.

On the same website, there’s a great recipe for green beans, which can be served as an accompaniment to the roast turkey.

Lowcarbdiets has a stuffing recipe which uses low-carb bread, vegetables and seasoning to create a lower-carb version of this roast turkey accompaniment.

Still with Lowcarbdiets, the site also includes a pumpkin pie recipe which has roughly 8g of carbohydrate per serving so you don’t need to miss out on this seasonal speciality.

Finally, Mark’s Daily Apple has a whole host of delicious sounding recipes – from wild mushroom soup with vegetable confetti, devilled eggs, zucchini (courgette) and squash gratin to scallops wrapped in bacon and crab bisque. Check out the full range here.

As it so happens the Thanksgiving meal isn’t a million miles away from the typical British Christmas menu, so hopefully our British readers will find some inspiration for their own Christmas cooking.

Venison Stew – Slow Cooker

After a sunny, dry and mild September and October, normal Scottish autumn weather has resumed… Rain, winds and dark, dreary days are once more upon us.

The consolation is a stew – warm, delicious and extremely comforting. I love stew so much I’d eat it in the height of summer anyway, but it does seem so fitting for this time of year. I’ve used venison here, but you could substitute this with beef or lamb instead (choose cuts that needs long, slow cooking).

I’ve suggested three to four servings – three is best for greed purposes. Serve this with steamed cauliflower and broccoli. You can also make fake mashed potatoes with steamed cauliflower – recipe here.

Venison Stew

  • Servings: 3-4
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Print

  • venison 2600g venison (choose the meat that needs long, slow cooking)
  • 2 small onions, very finely diced
  • Three medium-sized carrots, peeled and cut into big chunks
  • 4 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 2-3 sticks of celery, chopped
  • 100g streaky bacon
  • 1/2tbsp salt
  • 1tbsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1tbsp Herbes de Provence
  • 1tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped
  • 11/2 tbsp cornflour

 

  1. Put the venison in a Ziplock or equivalent plastic bag with the salt, pepper, corn flour, and herbs and shake well so that all the meat is coated in the flour.
  2. Put the meat and the rest of the ingredients in a slow cooker and mix well. Cover the ingredients with water (remember, the vegetables will leak out water as they cook too, so you only need the water to just cover the ingredients.
  3. Set the slow cooker to low and leave for seven to eight hours. (Remember that taking the lid off a slow cooker adds another 20 minutes to the cooking time.)

Serve and enjoy.

(If you don’t have a slow cooker, then prepare the meat as in stage 1, then place in a large casserole dish with the rest of the ingredients and add water. You’ll need a little more than if you were using a slow cooker but basically add enough water to cover all the ingredients. Cover the dish with a lid and cook at 150 degrees C (130 fan) for three to four hours – until meltingly tender.)

This recipe has 21g of carbs per serving and 5g of fibre if serving three, and 15g of carbs and 3.75g of fibre for four. If you leave out the cornflour, you’ll reduce the carb count by a further 6-7g per serving – but a thick, juicy sauce is a marvellous thing…

 

 

Eight Quick Dips

Tomato Base:

4 large, ripe tomatoes

1 heaped tsp of tom puree

½ tsp brown sugar

a few drops of sherry vinegar

olive oil

Method

Chop tomatoes until pulpy, add all ingredients escept oil, stir and then drizzle oil over.

Variations

Herby – add chopped oregano and basil to taste.

Spicy – add a large splash of tabasco, 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce and a good sprinkling of celery salt.

Sweet and chunky – stir in 2 heaped tbsp caramelised red onion relish, a chunk of diced cucumber and a few slices of green jalapeno.

Piquant pepper – chop 4 Peppadew peppers, a handful of black olives and add to the tomato base along with some chopped parsley.

Speedy salsa – add 1 chopped tomato, cut into chunks, along with 1 finely chopped red onion, the juice of 1 lime and a small bunch of chopped coriander.

 

Creamy base:

150g plain yoghurt

85g mayonnaise

salt and black pepper

Method

Mix all ingredients together thoroughly.

 

Sweet roasted garlic – roast the unpeeled cloves from ½ a garlic bulb with a drizzle of olive oil for 15 min at 190C/170c fan/gas 5. Peel, crush then stir into the base.

Blue Cheese – chop 50g Dolcelatte into small chunks, stir into base, making sure that cheese is well incorporated.

Thai – style – slice 2 spring onions into fine slivers, mix into base then swirl in 2 tbsp sweet chilli sauce.

Red Meat and Cancer Risk

steakConfused about health headlines of late and worried that your low-carb diet might give you cancer?

That might be the case if you’ve been reading the reporting of a certain World Health Organisation (WHO) study looking into diet which said eating processed meat increased the chances of developing colorectal cancer by 18 percent, while red meat was “probably carcinogenic” but that there was less evidence.

It depends on where you read the news of course as certain reporting of the story (and other similar research) has blown it out of all proportion – at least with their sensationalist headlines. Take a bow the Daily Mail.

Zoe Harcombe’s blog dissects the research and the headlines. I’d recommend reading it for a more detailed take on the story.

Personally*, I buy good quality, unsmoked bacon and good quality red meat. I don’t eat ham and other processed meats, mainly because I don’t find them very filling – but I’m happy to eat chorizo occasionally. The headlines don’t bother me in the least.

I’ll keep buying and eating unsmoked bacon and good quality red meat because eating them helps me maintain a low-carb diet, which in turn helps me feel lively and energetic, instead of lethargic, grumpy and depressed.

 

*A disclaimer here – you must make up your own mind about what you choose to eat of course…

When you are a food addict, what can you do to re-claim your body?

Susan Pierce Thompson PhD is a neuroscientist who used to be pretty hefty in her teens and twenties till she went on a 12 step programme along the lines of alcoholics anonymous but dealing with the issue of food addiction.  She has stayed very slim for the last 12 years and reckons she knows what keeps us from losing weight and keeping it off long term. Indeed she teaches about this subject at university and has recently started online classes with team support to help the food addicts get “happy, thin and free”. She calls her programme Bright Line Eating.

The basics of this is that the “everything in moderation” mantra does not work with the seriously addicted food addict. Flour, sugar and anything that even tastes sweet gets the heave-ho permanently. Could you do this? Of course you could, if you want to get thin and stay thin. But Susan recognises that breaking your intentions happens and that the most important thing is to resume your plan immediately rather than beat yourself up about it, or use a minor deviation as an excuse to binge with a vow to start on Monday again.

Rats as well as humans seem to fall into three groups. The ones who seem able to resist temptation without a problem, the ones who can resist it for a while but then will give in, particularly if under some sort of stress, and the highly addicted who just can’t leave sugar, sweet stuff, refined flour products and white potatoes in all their forms alone. Susan says that modern foods and patterns of eating have hijacked the brain and sap willpower, induce cravings and set up feelings of hunger. Indeed she has found that rats rate sugar water as more pleasurable than cocaine even when they had been made into serious cocaine addicts by researchers.

The taste of anything sweet seems to be a problem. Saccharine, and all artificial sweeteners have the ability to induce cravings, even stevia. Although fat and salt make food more palatable, and humans eat more of it when laced with butter, cream, olive oil and salt for instance, they don’t set up the same addiction circuits. It is the flour/sugar items such as chocolate, ice cream and pizza that are the top addictive foods for most westernised humans, with potatoes and potato products coming in fourth.

When you get a craving for something, parts of your brain are being affected by chemicals that you have no control over. Cravings and hunger are controlled by the hypothalamus. This is your body’s thermostat that controls all sorts of complex processes through the release of hormones.

Your willpower centre is in the anterior cingulate cortex and behaviour is controlled here. The problem is that behaviour gets more difficult to control if you have to withstand temptation for just 15 minutes. It gets even harder to control behaviour when the blood sugar is low or you are already tired, have already had your temptation tested, are feeling emotional or have been focussing on tasks. Susan calls this the “willpower gap”. You know what you are meant to do but you just can’t seem to help yourself from doing something else. Like opening that packet of biscuits.

Your brainstem is where leptin is active. Your brainstem is the most primitive part of the brain and the most basic functions that keep you alive such as breathing reside here.  The trouble is that insulin resistance leads to leptin resistance, and although your brain stem may be flooded with leptin, telling you that you are full, the leptin resistance means that the message doesn’t get through, and your brain stem thinks you are starving. Mindless eating ensues just as mindless breathing continues.

A major step in resolving this impasse is that insulin levels need to be lowered. And what raises insulin the most? Yes, sugar and starch.  This is why a low carb diet, as we describe in our book, can help you lose weight and get your appetite under control. It is all down to physiology.

Susan goes a bit further than we do, however, in that all sweet stuff, with the exception of sweet fruit, is banned. Also all flour products are completely banned. This is because those people who have very serious food issues are more susceptible to dopamine, the reward hormone.

Dopamine is active in the nucleus accumbens. It goes up in response not only to food stimuli but also to sex stimuli for example. Indeed Susan describes sugar as the pornography equivalent of sex. I have to agree with her here.

In large magazine shops you often see rows of women’s magazines on one side and men’s magazines on the other.  The men’s magazines seem to be mainly all about becoming more competent in something eg music, muscle building, computer know-how, with some soft pornography thrown in. Women’s magazines have “how to be more nurturing” magazines with pets, home decorating and crafts taking about a quarter of the space. The rest seems evenly split between “how to make lovely food” often featuring beautifully iced sponge cakes with lashings of cream on the one hand, and “how to get thin from not eating beautifully ices sponge cakes with lashings of cream on them”. I’ve often thought of food articles and particularly photographs as being porn for women.

So, back to dopamine. What a great hormone. You have lots of it and you feel like you rule the world. The downside is that your reward feeling gets worn down by the never ending waves of  dopamine and you tend to need a bigger fix for the same wonderful feelings over time. Also if dopamine becomes depleted you can feel pretty unhappy and also can need another fix to bring it up.  This is a reason why Zyban, the anti-smoking drug can induce suicidal depression.

Zyban, also known as varenicicline,  makes the craving for cigarettes stop by blocking dopamine. When you smoke, you don’t get the hit. Instead you think, “This fag is lousy, why the hell am I smoking it?” This makes it somewhat easier to break the smoking habit. The downside is that you can feel lousy about everything. And sometimes the effect is unpredictably tragic.

Despite the common belief  that we are in control of our behaviour rather than our brain chemicals, Susan is so convinced of the chemical superiority over willpower, that she builds methods of how to resist the hijack into her diet plan.

Dr Thompson knows that a chemically affected brain really has the belief that the body is starving and that flour and sugar are even more powerfully addictive than heroin or cocaine for about a third of the population. She knows you can’t reason with your brain stem. Instead it reasons with you.

That little voice says, “I deserve that”. “It’s only one time”. “It’s only a little bit.”  As more and more exceptions to our dietary plan creep in, we watch ourselves breaking rules, and the belief that we are incapable and lacking in some way, especially compared to thin people, reduces our feelings of competency. Our self-esteem goes down the plug hole. As I have said before, a prominent bariatric surgeon told me that the drop out rate with bariatric patients was particularly high because of the very low self- esteem that this group of people have.

Susan says that very clear boundaries are necessary to get back on track. A lot of planning, daily preparation, long term habit change and support is necessary to overcome addictive eating. Emergency action plans and support are needed for the inevitable breaks in willpower.  But, she says that dopamine receptors recover in time and that as insulin resistance disappears, the insatiable hunger goes with it. She says that reliance on willpower is the single biggest mistake dieters make. Instead you need a whole system to deal with false hunger, addiction and social pressures to eat flour and sugar.

Restorative behaviours such as meditation are important. So is getting out in nature. Anything other than food that boosts your willpower battery is good. Exercise is not part of the plan for most people because it can be a step too far when good eating habits are in the process of being embedded. She thinks exercise can be too much a sap on a person’s willpower unless it is already an entrenched habit.

The path to being slim and healthy is not easy so a different way of looking at the problem is welcome. In particular simple calorie measuring is no good for some people if sugar and flour are part of the calories. Also low carbing may not be extreme enough for some people and cutting out all sweeteners and sugar rather than keeping to small amounts of sugar and starch may be necessary.

Based on an online webinar by Susan Pierce Thompson PhD. October 14 2015.