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    Thread: Glycemic Food Index

    1. #1
      FUZO's Avatar
      FUZO is offline FUZO
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      Default Glycemic Food Index



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      Glycemic Food Index
      Glycemic Food Index
      What is the Glycemic Index?
      The Glycemic Index (GI) is a system of ranking the quality of carbohydrate in a food according to the immediate effect it has on blood glucose. Individual foods are compared to pure glucose, which has its Glycemic Index set at 100. For comparison, pearl barley has a value of 33, oranges are 49, and whole wheat bread is 71.

      The Glycemic Index was conceived in 1979 by Dr. David Jenkins, together with Dr. Thomas Wolever and Dr. Alexandra Jenkins. The GI breakthrough was the outcome of research conducted at both Oxford University and at the University of Toronto to determine which foods would be best for people with diabetes.

      Not all carbohydrate foods are created equal, in fact they behave quite differently in our bodies. The glycemic index or GI describes this difference by ranking carbohydrates according to their effect on our blood glucose levels. Choosing low GI carbs - the ones that produce only small fluctuations in our blood glucose and insulin levels - is the secret to long-term health reducing your risk of heart disease and diabetes and is the key to sustainable weight loss.

      The following foods are grouped according to their rating on the glycemic index . The best carbohydrate choices are in the low-glycemic group within the index. Restock the refrigerator and pantry to emphasize low-glycemic foods. Ditch the refined breads and breakfast cereals, baked and mashed spuds, white rice and rice cakes, toaster waffles, tator tots and french fries.

      The consumption of high-glycemic foods spikes insulin and reduces glucagon thus preventing the burning of body fat. Try to stay away from high-glycemic foods and stick to lower glycemic choices (see lists below) that will produce less insulin. Insulin stimulates your 30 billion fat cell receptors and deposits carbohydrate energy directly into their interiors, making you fatter and fatter. There is no other way to store fat. Every time you eat a meal, your blood sugar rises. Your goal is to consume the foods (low-glycemic), which will cause the least amount of insulin production.

      Any high-glycemic foods should only be consumed in minimum quantities and combined with dietary proteins and fats in a meal. The only exception is a high-glycemic drink after exercise. But remember, even too much of the low-glycemic foods can make you fat.


      LOW GLYCEMIC FOODS 20-49 (Your Best FAT WARS Allies)
      FRUITS:
      All berries
      Cherries
      Apples
      Oranges
      Peaches
      Apricots
      Plums
      Grapefruit
      Pears

      NUTS AND SEEDS:
      Almonds, Walnuts
      Peanuts
      Flaxseeds
      Pumpkin seeds
      Sunflower seeds

      SWEETENERS:
      Stevia
      FOS (frycto-oligo-saccharides)

      VEGETABLES:
      Artichokes
      Asparagus
      Black-eyed peas
      Split peas
      Bulgur
      Azuki beans
      Butter beans
      Black beans
      Garbanzo beans
      Celery
      All lettuces
      Navy beans
      Peppers
      Soybeans
      Tomatoes
      Onions

      GRAINS:
      All bran cereals
      Oatmeal/Oat bran
      Whole grain pastas
      Barley

      BEVERAGES:
      Fresh vegetable juice
      Tomato juice
      Green tea
      Water

      DAIRY:
      Organic milk
      Organic plain yogurt (no added sugar)
      Low-fat cottage cheese



      MODERATE-GLYCEMIC FOODS: Rated 50-69 (LIMIT CONSUMPTION)

      FRUITS:
      Grapes
      Watermelons
      Pineapples
      Mangos
      Kiwis
      Bananas (semi-hard)
      Figs
      BEVERAGES:
      Apple juice
      Orange juice
      Grapefruit juice
      Black cherry juice
      Blueberry juice

      VEGETABLES:
      Beets
      Carrots
      Corn on the cob
      Lima beans
      Yams
      Sweet potatoes
      Potatoes (red, white)
      Peas
      SWEETENERS:
      Unrefined raw honey
      Organic unrefined brown sugar
      Unprocessed blackstrap molasses
      Organic, grade C maple syrup

      GRAINS:
      Basmati rice
      Brown rice
      Wild rice
      Buckwheat
      Muesli
      Most pastas
      Pita bread
      Popcorn
      Whole wheat bread (100% stone-ground)
      Whole grain breads
      Pumpernickel bread

      DAIRY:
      Custard



      HIGH-GLYCEMIC FOODS: Rated 70-100 (EAT AT YOUR OWN RISK)

      FRUITS:
      Most dried fruits
      Bananas (ripe)
      Papayas
      BEVERAGES:
      Soft drinks
      and sport drinks
      (added sugars)
      Carrot juice

      SWEETENERS:
      Corn syrup solids
      Sucrose (table sugar)
      Glucose and glucose
      polymers
      (maltodextrin-based drinks)
      Honey
      Maltose
      High-fructose corn syrup
      Barley malt

      VEGETABLES:
      Parsnips
      Potato (baked)
      Cooked carrots
      French fries
      Yams
      Sweet corn
      Potato chips
      DAIRY:
      Ice cream

      GRAINS:
      White bread
      Whole wheat bread
      French bread
      Bagels
      Cold Cereal
      Breakfast cereals (refined with added sugar)
      Corn chips
      Cornflakes
      Rice cakes
      Crackers and crispbread
      Doughnuts
      Hamburger and hotdog buns
      White rice
      Muffins (due to the processed flour)
      Pancakes
      Puffed rice or wheat
      Pretzels
      Shredded wheat
      Toaster waffles



      How is it tested?
      In the two decades since the development of the Glycemic Index, it has been proven repeatedly that the only way to obtain consistent, accurate results is by using blood samples from human subjects and following a precise protocol. Our standard protocol requires that ten normal subjects are studied on multiple occasions in the morning after an overnight fast. After a fasting blood sample, subjects eat the test meal and have further blood samples at 15, 30, 45, 60, 90 and 120 minutes after starting to eat. Capillary blood is obtained by finger-prick. Each subject conducts one trial of each test food and 3 trials of the reference food. The blood is analysed in our laboratory and the incremental areas under the blood glucose curves are calculated using the specified method. The ratio of the test food and the reference food areas gives the GI value.

      Health Benefits
      You are what you eat.

      This old adage has been proven correct again when it comes to the GI. The original concept was a response to concern for people with impaired insulin responses. Improved stability of blood sugar levels is critical to those people with diabetes, but research has repeatedly shown that stable blood sugar levels have positive health implications for everyone. Diets based on the GI have been shown to stabilize blood sugar, improve body weight, decrease visceral fat, control appetite, improve energy level, enhance memory, balance mood, promote regularity, reduce hospital stay after cardiovascular surgery
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    2. #2
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      Default Re: Glycemic Food Index

      Fuzo great post. I've been trying to live by the rules above. I didn't see strawberry's on the LOW list but figured they were in with "all Berries". Also, sweet potatoes are a good vegetable with low GI.

    3. #3
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      Default Re: Glycemic Food Index

      good stuff. there's also https://www.glycemicindex.com/ and click on GI database. you can type in pretty much any type of food and it will give you the GI and GL of the food.
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    4. #4
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      Default Re: Glycemic Food Index

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      Another GREAT post.

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