silentsquirrel
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
"net carbs" is a term used by American products and websites, because they include FIBER (note the spelling) in their total carbs, so need to subtract it to get net carbs.@Sue56 In my opinion put sugars out of your mind, its the carb values you need to watch. Look out for the word net carbs as well, i.e. something can appear carby but the net result is that it isn't, i.e. the body ignores the item because it can't digest it. Not all manufacturers put this on their lables and it has been dismissed as misleading by a number of diabetic organisations. I have done a lot of experimentation with this, you see it a lot on keto friendly products which although show a particular carb figure the net figure is lower. By testing before and after I am quite comfortable that the net carb info works for me very well.
Breakfast....
I get delivered each month a low carb bread replacement, its 1 carb a slice and its very good, if you were not told you would not know its not normal brown bread, its that good.
A lot of my meals include this and the rolls as a substitute for bread and potatoes.
So I have for breakfast, (not the whole list at once! lol!)........
Eggs, poached, boiled, scrambled on toast or with mushrooms and bacon sometimes or the full english. Scrambled egg variation, add chopped mushrooms or ham.
Omelette plain, or cheese or with filling
Bacon and egg sandwich
Avocados with toast
Kvarg yoghurts vanilla ones are the lowest in carbs but all very low, sometimes eat only half of one.
Toast with peanut butter or thin layer of low carb jam/marmalade or the real thing.
Australian seeded cracker biscuits, bout same size as riveta ones, very yummy with butter and cheese, or pate or marmite or ham etc.
Small amounts of fruit, strawberries, melon, kiwi, apple but only if I have had say poached egg on toast, eat this last, has less effect and is hidden by what you have just eaten.
Continental breakfasts - cheese, ham with low carb bread or crackers.
Keto low carb porridge is pretty good, has fruit and cinnamon in it.
Some lucky ones can tolerate wheatabix or shreddies - test and see, your blood suggar monitor is your friend!
Good luck!
In the UK, FIBRE is listed separately from carbs, so we do NOT subtract it to get net carbs - the total carbs figure is already "net".
If you are unsure if a website is USA or UK based, the clue is how they spell fibER/fibRE.