Yes, pretty similar to the advice I was given and still get from the nurse who specialises in diabetes. I now just nod and say nothing. Don't know what would have happened if I had not found the forum. She tells me that I can have up to two slices of cake a week. one biscuit a day plus four squares of chocolate and a bunch of grapes and a banana each day. 60% of meals should be carbohydrate based as these are the "building blocks of life" LOL 🙂
For me what worked first was reading paper books from library. All the books I have read are explicitly saying to switch to lower GI starchy foods, wholegrain pasta, and bread, sweet potatoes. What I am not following is to switch to skimmed dairy products, because they are tasting awfully. So I prefer eat less cheese, and buy less high quality one.
I know drinking alchool it's bad, so I reduce doses, and instead to buy some cheap diesle fule tasty whiskey at LIDL I boughr a 16 year aged Lagavulin, a year ago, for special treat. Still more than half full.
I eat some 73% or 88% chocholate squares some times and i put bitter cocoa powder in my milk but in small quantities, and even if I am a Type 2 I count the carbs and the calories.
For lunch I eaten wholewheat Spaghetti, garlic and hot peppers, a carrot and cabbage salad and a pear for a total of 50g of carbs and 600 calories, for instance. If you search a post from me from a week ago I have HBa1C that is firmly in the non-diabetic range. (Ah I am T2 not T1, no HCP told or explained me how to carb count)
Because I know that if I really like spaghetti I can eat them, but I can't make a second course with fried potatoes. and a slice of banana cake.
If I really want a slice of banana cake I'll eat only,say, a salad and a piece of roasted hen before.
I am actually following official guidelines on this
As you say Nick, general advice assumes a healthy pancreas. Certainly, I would expect a nurse/dietician who has a specialism in diabetes to be fully aware of the impact of carbs, and many members have reported this to be the case. Problems with advice tend to come when a dietician is not aware of the specific problems associated with diabetes. As for Diabetes UK, they have been pilloried many times for adhering to the 'standard' dietary advice, although there is some evidence that they are starting to accept lower carb as being a better option, so there is hope on the horizon!
Of course, we tend to hear more of the individuals giving out bad advice than those giving out good, and it does go wider when you consider the 'do not test' advice standard for Type 2 from many healthcare professionals - these HCPs may genuinely believe they are giving the best advice based on their training, or they may simply think they know best even when presented with evidence from patients like many of the people here 🙄
My idea is that the standard dietary advice is taught and understood wrong.
Not all people are willing to read about it and GP and HCP unfortunately are tending to give a really terse advice.
I think that on the diabetes UK website the advice could be a bit more stronger, like saying "you should really switch to whole wheat product, it's not forbidden to eat white bread or fried potatoes now and then but it's not advisable basing the diet on them" and the fact that starch is a carboyhdrate too and its found in rice, pasta, bread and most grains and derived.