Can anyone direct to the right place for ideas please?
I wonder if it might be helpful rather than to aim for ‘low carb’ or ‘moderate carb’ or even ‘high carb’ (none of which really have any agreed definitions) for you just to start where you are with a food diary for a few weeks.
It can be helpful to make a reasonable estimate of the total carb content (not just ‘of which sugars’) of your meals, snacks and drinks. This might highlight some easy wins or things you might just happily swap to an alternative or do without. The highest carb items are likely (but not guaranteed) to be the ones that raise your blood glucose the most.
The really tricky thing is that blood glucose responses to various foods are highly individual, and it can be impossible to say which types and amounts of carbohydrate will ‘spike’ your BG without checking for yourself. That’s why many members here choose to use a BG meter when trying to tweak their menus.
You take a reading before and again 2hrs after the first bite of a meal, to see what the differences are. Initially to some extent the numbers themselves are far less important than the rise from the meal. Ideally you would be aiming for a rise of no more than 2-3mmol/L. Don’t just go on one attempt either - try a couple of goes at a meal or food before you give it a black mark
😉 (other things than food can affect your levels!).
Once you can see a meal or source of carbs that seem to be causing larger BG rises than you’d like you can experiment with reducing portion sizes, looking for swaps, and trying different types (sometimes just having things at a different time of day makes a difference). Gradually you can tweak and tailor your menu to find one that suits your tastebuds, your waistline and your BG levels, while keeping is a flexible and sustainable as you can
🙂
If you are interested in this approach you may find
test-review-adjust by Alan S a helpful framework.
If you need to self fund a BG meter (many GPs are reluctant to finance the strips), the most affordable meters members here have found are the
SD Gluco Navii or the
Spirit Tee2 - which both have test strips at around £8 for 50, where some other brands can be £25-30 for a pot!
Good luck! And let us know how you get on
🙂