
Where should I start …. I’m one of these people that used to live with snickers bars, sandwiches and tons of coffee. The healthier lifestyle was forced into me. It’s still a pain, as I LOVE the smell and the taste of fresh bread. 13 years later I cook on daily basis, I eat wholesome food and I take informed decisions about my diet.Welcome @KetoH I definitely wouldn’t agree about Type 1 being a good thing to happen to me. It’s a complete pain. Are you on MDI or a pump? How long have you had Type 1? Cake-wise I just have moderate portions of normal cake. I try to avoid sweeteners and would rather have a small amount of sugar.
Sorry, I ate my breakfast sourdough crumpet with peanut butter before I had a chance to take a photo 😎Look at my breakfast this morning:
@Inka, I would like to know more about 'be my own pancreas'. What do you mean?My thoughts are that it’s not necessary to eat a keto-type diet to control Type 1. It just swaps one set of problems for another. There is no ‘trick’ to controlling Type 1. I’ve had it almost 30 years and tried all kinds of diets. My basal insulin is less than half what you take…
No, my approach is to eat a normal healthy diet and ‘be my own pancreas’. Over the years I’ve realised that using insulin correctly is the answer not a restrictive diet. That and retaining insulin sensitivity, which a keto diet will affect adversely. Also, I like to remind myself frequently that Type 1 isn’t our only concern. We also need to remember things like heart disease, etc, and to eat in the best way to reduce the risk of that.
Type 1 is an auto-immune condition. It’s easy to try to find a cause or blame yourself, but it’s nothing to do with poor diet. Too many Type 1s have disordered eating and I’m very wary of anything that contributes to that or promotes it.
I have some builders at home and decided that posting the recipe would be something useful to doSorry, I ate my breakfast sourdough crumpet with peanut butter before I had a chance to take a photo 😎
@Inka, I would like to know more about 'be my own pancreas'. What do you mean?
I am sorry if I left the impression that I blame myself. There is also a genetic factor to play with diabetes (like with most of the autoimmune conditions). My grandmother was with T1 for most of her life. Regardless diabetes, my diet wasn't healthy at all and consequences were due anyway (at least I think so, but who can tell with certainty..).
Well, I thought I was clear but let me reiterate it: I don't blame my diet for my T1. But living on sugar, carbs, chocolate and caffeine could have consequences (coronary, vascular, metabolite, digestive, neurological, etc.). I hope the self-blame is not a trigger, that I pulled unintentionally...Type 1 does have a genetic factor for a few people but most people diagnosed with Type 1 don’t have a near relative with it. My consultant said it’s 20% genetic 80% environment (ie virus or whatever). The trigger isn’t poor diet, although it’s possible certain foods may be implicated (eg cows milk).
A poor diet does lead to consequences but Type 1 isn’t one of them. You’re still implying that you got Type 1 because you ate Snickers and the like. I understand that need for a kind of self-blame or to find a ‘reason’ but it’s not correct. When I was very young I took 2 or 3 lumps of sugar out of a bowl and ate them. An old lady saw and said “Don’t do that - you’ll get diabetes”. And some years later I did get diabetes but the two things aren’t connected in the slightest. Yet even knowing that, it did come into my head when I was first diagnosed - like I’d brought it on myself somehow. But I didn’t - and neither did you.
Like @helli , my diet was very healthy when I got Type 1. That upset me at first - until it was explained to me that it was nothing to do with diet.
By ‘be my own pancreas’, I simply mean do the job my insulin-producing cells would do if my immune system hadn’t killed most of them off. That is - try to make sure my basal insulin keeps my blood sugar in range in the absence of food, and bolus appropriately for the food I eat, which includes calculating the right amount of insulin and injecting it at the right time.
So, I choose what I believe to be healthy foods and then calculate the insulin I need to cover them, just as my pancreas would do if it was working properly. I also have desserts sometimes and things like chocolate, but I eat no more or no less than I would do if I didn’t have diabetes.
Never had the chance... sorry. I read about it though, sounds good.Has anyone tried or been able to try monk fruit?