Thanks for your response, Drummer. I'm a drummer too ! That has given me some base to start upon, and I appreciate it.
@Beebfader , I don't have a diagnosis of Coeliac Disease, but on my Endo's direction, I lead a strictly gluten-free lifestyle, alongside my T2 diabetes. For me, I was diagnosed as T2 about 4-5years before needing to go GF.
For me, to get my T2 under control, and into a good place, I trimmed back on my carbohydrate intake. So, for me, that was sugar, baked goods, root vegetables, as the biggies. That worked for me.
Reducing grain based carbs is a great starter for gluten-free, although it isn't only wheat that contains gluten. Gluten is infuriatingly sneak stuff, being in all sorts, including stuff like cola drinks (even the sugar-free variants - it's i n the caramel), barley, Worcestershire and Soy sauces.
To get the hang of a sketch out way of eating for your T2, have a look at the following link:
https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/visual-guides
For the Coeliac aspects, have a look on here:
https://www.coeliac.org.uk/information-and-support/living-gluten-free/the-gluten-free-diet/ It's a great starter, but to be honesteven though I wasn't taking in much gluten when I had to shun it all, I still sent ages on my phone/laptop googling "Is x, y or z gluten-free?"
It takes a while to get into these things. For you going totally gluten free is important. Annoyingly, there's no halfway house for gluten, whereas the general carbs you are cutting down, not necessarily cutting out.
Have you been referred to a dietician, or someone who can talk to you about your Coeliac issues?
(Just as an aside, I don't used gluten-free substitutes, except, GF Worcestershire sauce. The rest I just avoid, although, that's not for everyone.)
One final thing; could you share a little around your diabetes diagnosis? The only reason I ask is Coeliac is an auto-immune (AI) condition, and once you have one, sometimes others crop up. T2 diabetes is not an AI condition, but Type 1 is, so it'd be good to rule out T1 - just in case.
Good luck with it all. You have a steep learning curve ahead of you.