abendgules (
abendgules) wrote2013-05-30 04:41 pm
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Saturday candy?
Thanks to several months of enforced inactivity, I'm feeling uncomfortably round, and had an unpleasant encounter with a measuring tape recently.
So I'm resolved to get out of the office at lunchtime more often for walks - daily isn't too often - and I'm considering drastic measures, for me: Saturday Candy.
I encountered this at Crown this year in Nordmark - that some good Swedish parents still limit their kids' intake of junk to Saturdays. I'd never heard of something so, so, so....sensible. Sheesh. (Especially when the Western world is staring an obesity epidemic down the gullet - how do the Swedes manage it, when everyone else is so helpless?)
So I'm seriously thinking: I don't eat a lot of candy, but I do like biscuits, particularly at work. I do like a sweet to follow dinner, of some kind. And I don't know if I can follow through, when my beanpole-shaped-sweetie noshes down on his treats in the evening. Could I actually follow a Saturday Candy rule?
(I'm painfully suggestible, I've discovered. Don't remember this always being the case, but by god, if I'm reading about someone enjoying a pot of coffee, all of a sudden nothing short of a pot of coffee will do...similarly when someone says 'I'd love a cup of tea' on TV, etc.)
I was put in mind of it (see? suggestible) by a BBC food article about a family giving up sugar because of a daughter's Type 1 diabetes.
I know a few people who avoid sugar, but why would you substitute dextrose for sucrose (shown in one recipe)? It all turns into sugar in your body, doesn't it?
So I'm resolved to get out of the office at lunchtime more often for walks - daily isn't too often - and I'm considering drastic measures, for me: Saturday Candy.
I encountered this at Crown this year in Nordmark - that some good Swedish parents still limit their kids' intake of junk to Saturdays. I'd never heard of something so, so, so....sensible. Sheesh. (Especially when the Western world is staring an obesity epidemic down the gullet - how do the Swedes manage it, when everyone else is so helpless?)
So I'm seriously thinking: I don't eat a lot of candy, but I do like biscuits, particularly at work. I do like a sweet to follow dinner, of some kind. And I don't know if I can follow through, when my beanpole-shaped-sweetie noshes down on his treats in the evening. Could I actually follow a Saturday Candy rule?
(I'm painfully suggestible, I've discovered. Don't remember this always being the case, but by god, if I'm reading about someone enjoying a pot of coffee, all of a sudden nothing short of a pot of coffee will do...similarly when someone says 'I'd love a cup of tea' on TV, etc.)
I was put in mind of it (see? suggestible) by a BBC food article about a family giving up sugar because of a daughter's Type 1 diabetes.
I know a few people who avoid sugar, but why would you substitute dextrose for sucrose (shown in one recipe)? It all turns into sugar in your body, doesn't it?
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Good luck with candy saturdays. It sounds like a good concept!
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The different sugars, IIRC, are metabolized somewhat differently, and -- what is probably more important to a diabetic -- have different effects on blood sugar and on the insulin level. The diabetic diet strongly favors slow-release carbs, and tracks blood sugar and insuln levels very carefully, but I disremember all the details since it's not me who's diabetic (it was my Dad). I also learned from him that the more closely a diabetic regulates their blood sugar, the fewer side effects they have later on -- a counter-example being a dear friend who had a wild and careless youth and died of kidney failure in his 50s.
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I still agree with you that Candy on Saturdays is eminently sensible, and while we aren't there yet with Gwen, I'm seriously thinking of doing it when she's older.
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If you're interested in a good read about the different types of sugar and how to break the sugar habit I can recommend a book by David Gillespie "The Sweet Poison Quit Plan". He has also published "Sweet Poison: Why Sugar Makes Us Fat". I haven't read "Sweet Poison: Why Sugar Makes Us Fat" which was actually his first book but I have read the Quit Plan one. It has very good explanations of the different types of sugar any even provides some recipes that use dextrose.
It's been quite some time since I read it but from memory, fructose is actually the main problem sugar. It's ok when it comes in whole fruit because the fibre counter-acts the effects of the fructose but the fructose that comes in regular sugar is far more detrimental.
Both books are available on Amazon if you're interested.
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I am allowed one "diversion" from this, for each gym session I do each work (or other hour of solid sweaty exercise like a fight practice). As a beer counts as a diversion I decided I would prioritise being able to share a beer with friends, than eating sweet snacks by myself.
Its noticeable how strong the sugar flavour now is when I do eat something like a cookie, and some of the sweets I used to eat, such as a citrus slice, have actually become unpleasant to my taste buds now due to the sensory overload.
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