mum2westiesGill
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Which one should Type 1 look at on packets?
Which one should Type 2 on tablets look at?
Which one should Type 2 on tablets look at?
Hi
Both T1 and T2 should look at "Total carbohydrate" - ignore "of which sugars" which is pretty meaningless. Hope this helps.
That was the information the carb counting dietitian told me when I went along for one-to-one carb counting education.Both T1 and T2 should look at "Total carbohydrate" - ignore "of which sugars" which is pretty meaningless.
I think you need to know both, as if the carb content is mostly sugar, it's likely that it will give a spike - not foolproof of course, but an extra bit of info.
I've absolutely raged against 'of which sugars' for months now.
dextrose is 100g per 100
Dextrose is just another name for glucose!
ready made mashed potato, the "of which sugars" is likely to be very low, but the mashed potato will hit you faster than the equivalent amount of sugar spoon for spoon,
Patti are you sure about that? pure sugar (as in a spoonful of the stuff) is guaranteed to hit you quicker than a mix of powders, E numbers, flavourings, oh and the tiny sprinkling of dehydrated potato flakes 😉
pure sugar (as in a spoonful of the stuff) is guaranteed to hit you quicker than a mix of powders, E numbers, flavourings, oh and the tiny sprinkling of dehydrated potato flakes
100g of potato doesn't contain 100g of glucose though. A portion of mash is supposed to be about 27gram carb or about 7 teaspoons of white sugar or 9 teaspoons of brown sugar or 2 slices of white bread.
As for GI: Potato 56-111 - most averages usually given in high 80's
Potato, instant - 74-97, average 80, white bread averages 73.
Funnily enough I had mashed potato tonight (actually creamed potato as I put a bucket of butter into it), twice cooked pork stuffed with black pudding, red cabbage and mushroom and 5-spice gravy , no problems.
Exactly! Which is why Glycemic Load is an important marker. It still frustrates me though that things I was told for years were 'slow release' are just as fast, if not faster absorbed than teaspoons of sugar. I accept that context/mixtures of foods hugely impact absorption speed (and GI is a pretty dodgy indicator anyway) but 'of which sugars' is pretty much of no value as far as I can see.