Everyone struggles with food temptation during the holidays, but people with diabetes must contend with even more.
The parties, goodies, and special food and drink that abound during this season can make sticking to a diabetes-friendly diet all the more challenging. How can you achieve a good balance of the right foods?
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Sugar in Your Diet
Many people believe sugar causes diabetes. Research has shown that’s simply not true. In fact, eating too much food and being overweight raise the risk for type 2 diabetes. Whether you’ve eaten too much steak or too much cake, it’s the overall intake of too many calories that counts.
Partly due to this misconception, people with diabetes used to be told to cut sugar from their diets. However, it’s the total amount of carbohydrates that you consume, more than the type, that affects how high your blood glucose levels rise.
That doesn’t give you the OK to eat all the sugar you want. But it does mean sugar and small portions of sugar-containing desserts can be part of your diet during the holidays—or any time.
Sweet Solutions
These recommendations can help you safely make sweet treats a part of your holiday tradition:
• If you want to have a treat, substitute it for another carb you would have eaten. For example, if you want a piece of pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving, give up the mashed potatoes or dinner rolls.
• Revise recipes to make them more diabetes-friendly. For instance, update dessert recipes by cutting the sugar by one-third to one-half. In its place, add sweet spices such as vanilla, cinnamon, and nutmeg, or use sugar substitutes. Reduce the fat in dessert recipes by replacing oil or butter in baked goods with applesauce or puréed prunes.
• Keep serving sizes of sweet desserts small. To do so, share a serving with a friend or family member. Skip the whipped cream or vanilla ice cream topping on your pie.
Finally, make family and friends the focus of your get-togethers instead of food. Don’t forget to keep up with your exercise routine, either.
By Barbara Floria, senior writer for Vitality. For more information, visit the American Diabetes Association at www.diabetes.org.


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