What To Eat To Beat Diabetes !
An estimated 4.5 million people are living
with diabetes in most countries today. Some 700 are newly diagnosed each day —
it’s a modern plague and a horribly common cause of early death.
But
in many cases, diabetes can be eased, and even reversed, through
changes in diet. In fact, by switching to a healthy diet, you can start
improving your health within a matter of hours.
There
are two types of diabetes, both of which are characterised by
chronically elevated levels of sugar in your blood. Type 1 occurs if
your pancreas stops producing insulin (the hormone that keeps your blood
sugar in check), and Type 2 if your body becomes resistant to insulin’s
effects.
Type
2, the most common form of diabetes, is primarily caused by a fatty
build-up around our muscle and liver cells, and 90 per cent of people
who get it are overweight.
Although
both forms of diabetes can be controlled through drugs, it is still
regarded as a life-shortening condition because of the widespread damage
caused by the build-up of sugar in the blood over time.
This can ultimately lead to blindness, kidney failure, heart attacks, and stroke.
A plant-based diet may even reverse Type 2 diabetes. Studies show that
dietary changes can enable those who have had Type 2 diabetes for
decades to get off all their insulin injections in as little as two
weeks.
It seems that eating chickpeas and other
beans is just as effective at slimming waistlines and improving blood
sugar as cutting calories. It also improves cholesterol and insulin
regulation.
I knew beans were healthy,
but I didn’t realise just how healthy they are until the amazing
microbiome research — studying the array of bacteria that live in the
gut, and how they can affect your health — started coming out.
Gut
bacteria love pulses, beans and legumes, which is why they take such an
important role in everyone's diet, and all should be encouraged to aim to eat
three servings a day. A serving is 60 g of hummus; 130 g of cooked
beans, split peas, lentils, tofu, or 150 g of fresh peas.
There are a few ways you can make it easier to get your three servings a day:
- Using dried pulses is cheaper, but it can be time consuming, so cook them in large batches, then portion and freeze.
- Instead of making one or two servings at a time, cook a large pot of a staple grain with a quick-cooking legume (such as lentils) mixed in, then portion and freeze until you need them.
- Prepare double batches of slow-cook soups and stews. You’ll save time, and flavour is enhanced, too.
- Double up on food prep such as chopping onions, refrigerating extra in a sealed container for the next meal.
- Keep an open tin of beans in the fridge as a reminder to put them in anything and everything.
- When you open a can of cooked beans, save the water. This viscous liquid, called ‘aquafaba’, is a great source of soluble fibre. It behaves like egg whites, and so it can be whipped into stiff peaks or added to recipes to be used as a binder.
The
mix of starches, proteins, and other soluble plant solids which have
migrated from the seeds to the water during the cooking process gives
aquafaba a wide range of useful emulsifying, foaming, binding,
gelatinising and thickening properties.
LIVER PROTECTION
A
condition called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has quietly
become one of the most common cause of chronic liver disease. Obese
people are particularly at risk of developing the condition.
It begins with the build-up of fat on the liver and can lead to inflammation and scarring (cirrhosis).
Just one can of a fizzy drink per day appears to raise the odds of fatty liver disease by 45 per cent.
But
eating oats has the power to significantly improve liver function among
overweight men and women — and help them lose weight as well.
Labels: avocado, blindness, changes in diet, diabetes, elevated sugar levels, heart attacks, impacts insulin secretion, kidney failure, Legumes, liver cells, Nuts, obese, reversed, stroke, Vitamin K
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