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Re: OATMEAL

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Darrell,

What do you mean by 'enjoy without worry'?

Mike

>

> I have heard that oatmeal is the one food that all diabetics can enjoy

> without worry. Is this true?

>

>

>

>

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>

> I have heard that oatmeal is the one food that all diabetics can

enjoy

> without worry. Is this true?

>

Darrell, I eat Oatmeal with cinnamon and walnuts in it about 4 to 5

mornings a week and BG's remain great. I do use the kind you cook and

not the Instant. However I have heard of others that can't eat it at

all... so best toeat it and wait 2 hours and test, Hugs, Tres

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Have you tried adding some fat to it???

I eat oatmeal almost every morning. When I dont add a teaspoon of butter

(yes real butter) to it, it dosnt stick well with me. When I do, I can go

till lunch time...

Angelia in OR who isnt on meds...

Re: OATMEAL

> Not me, by the time the two hours to test have gone by, I'm tanking to a

> real low. Shakey city....It just doesn't last with me. Even the steel

> ground. Elise

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My diabetes is controlled through diet and exercise also. Oatmeal raises my

levels quiet a bit, but I still eat it...not much of it. I cook it with water

only, then add cinnamon and a few walnuts. It stays with me for a long time!

onelvlady wrote: Oatmeal - don't dare it eat. It really

spikes me but then I am diet and exercised controlled.

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How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts, which is awefully big for

just a cup of oatmeal.

RE: OATMEAL

hello...

i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

glycemic index than instant oats...

here's my method of cooking...

1 cup oats + cinnamon

3 1/2 cups of water

added to pressure cooker

cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

let sit for 10 or 15 min...

oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

bon appetit

Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

diabetes-unsubscribe

Hope you come back soon!

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How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts, which is awefully big for

just a cup of oatmeal.

RE: OATMEAL

hello...

i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

glycemic index than instant oats...

here's my method of cooking...

1 cup oats + cinnamon

3 1/2 cups of water

added to pressure cooker

cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

let sit for 10 or 15 min...

oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

bon appetit

Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

diabetes-unsubscribe

Hope you come back soon!

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How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts, which is awefully big for

just a cup of oatmeal.

RE: OATMEAL

hello...

i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

glycemic index than instant oats...

here's my method of cooking...

1 cup oats + cinnamon

3 1/2 cups of water

added to pressure cooker

cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

let sit for 10 or 15 min...

oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

bon appetit

Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

diabetes-unsubscribe

Hope you come back soon!

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Hi:

Plain oatmeal without anything added, is by far my favorite breakfast. A

few months ago before I was diagnosed Type II I tried to lose weight and

kept track of everything I ate in a calorie counting program. I found it

discouraging that my oatmeal (steel cut are by far the best) contained 550

calories per cup raw, (a web site selling it says 600) and didn't stick with

me until lunch time. (The idea that Angelia posted of adding butter to it

is great, and I'll give it a try when I eat oatmeal again.) Yet as I

entered my ingestion of eggs, I found that three large eggs (I either boil

them or use a spray, no oil) contain a total of only 225 calories! That

means that you could, if you chose, eat six eggs for breakfast and have the

same caloric value as a cup of oatmeal.

Three eggs stick with me much better than a cup of oatmeal and they are in

the Bernstein/Atkins mode, though I dearly miss the oats. Again, when I get

down to a more comfortable weight I'll try the oatmeal again.

This is such an informative list. I've learned an awful lot about diabetes

and each individual's different reaction to it and have come to recognize

that I need to discover what works for me and what doesn't.

Thanks to everyone who posts.

Jay

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Hi:

Plain oatmeal without anything added, is by far my favorite breakfast. A

few months ago before I was diagnosed Type II I tried to lose weight and

kept track of everything I ate in a calorie counting program. I found it

discouraging that my oatmeal (steel cut are by far the best) contained 550

calories per cup raw, (a web site selling it says 600) and didn't stick with

me until lunch time. (The idea that Angelia posted of adding butter to it

is great, and I'll give it a try when I eat oatmeal again.) Yet as I

entered my ingestion of eggs, I found that three large eggs (I either boil

them or use a spray, no oil) contain a total of only 225 calories! That

means that you could, if you chose, eat six eggs for breakfast and have the

same caloric value as a cup of oatmeal.

Three eggs stick with me much better than a cup of oatmeal and they are in

the Bernstein/Atkins mode, though I dearly miss the oats. Again, when I get

down to a more comfortable weight I'll try the oatmeal again.

This is such an informative list. I've learned an awful lot about diabetes

and each individual's different reaction to it and have come to recognize

that I need to discover what works for me and what doesn't.

Thanks to everyone who posts.

Jay

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Hi:

Plain oatmeal without anything added, is by far my favorite breakfast. A

few months ago before I was diagnosed Type II I tried to lose weight and

kept track of everything I ate in a calorie counting program. I found it

discouraging that my oatmeal (steel cut are by far the best) contained 550

calories per cup raw, (a web site selling it says 600) and didn't stick with

me until lunch time. (The idea that Angelia posted of adding butter to it

is great, and I'll give it a try when I eat oatmeal again.) Yet as I

entered my ingestion of eggs, I found that three large eggs (I either boil

them or use a spray, no oil) contain a total of only 225 calories! That

means that you could, if you chose, eat six eggs for breakfast and have the

same caloric value as a cup of oatmeal.

Three eggs stick with me much better than a cup of oatmeal and they are in

the Bernstein/Atkins mode, though I dearly miss the oats. Again, when I get

down to a more comfortable weight I'll try the oatmeal again.

This is such an informative list. I've learned an awful lot about diabetes

and each individual's different reaction to it and have come to recognize

that I need to discover what works for me and what doesn't.

Thanks to everyone who posts.

Jay

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i have the 4 qt...8 qt will work, but they're heavy

and cumbersome to wash...

--- " , Bruce "

wrote:

> How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts,

> which is awefully big for just a cup of oatmeal.

>

> RE: OATMEAL

>

>

> hello...

>

> i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

> everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

> glycemic index than instant oats...

>

> here's my method of cooking...

>

> 1 cup oats + cinnamon

>

> 3 1/2 cups of water

>

> added to pressure cooker

>

> cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

> let sit for 10 or 15 min...

>

> oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

>

> bon appetit

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Diabetes homepage:

> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

>

> To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

> diabetes-unsubscribe

> Hope you come back soon!

>

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

i have the 4 qt...8 qt will work, but they're heavy

and cumbersome to wash...

--- " , Bruce "

wrote:

> How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts,

> which is awefully big for just a cup of oatmeal.

>

> RE: OATMEAL

>

>

> hello...

>

> i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

> everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

> glycemic index than instant oats...

>

> here's my method of cooking...

>

> 1 cup oats + cinnamon

>

> 3 1/2 cups of water

>

> added to pressure cooker

>

> cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

> let sit for 10 or 15 min...

>

> oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

>

> bon appetit

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Diabetes homepage:

> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

>

> To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

> diabetes-unsubscribe

> Hope you come back soon!

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i have the 4 qt...8 qt will work, but they're heavy

and cumbersome to wash...

--- " , Bruce "

wrote:

> How big a pressure cooker? My PC is 7 1/2 quarts,

> which is awefully big for just a cup of oatmeal.

>

> RE: OATMEAL

>

>

> hello...

>

> i eat the steel cut oatmeal in the morning

> everyday...i believe the steel cut has a lower

> glycemic index than instant oats...

>

> here's my method of cooking...

>

> 1 cup oats + cinnamon

>

> 3 1/2 cups of water

>

> added to pressure cooker

>

> cook on high till valve wobbles...then turn off and

> let sit for 10 or 15 min...

>

> oats are cooked...yet still have structure...

>

> bon appetit

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Diabetes homepage:

> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

>

> To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

> diabetes-unsubscribe

> Hope you come back soon!

>

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

Until/unless I get a small PC, I don't think I'll try your method. I don't like

oatmeal that much.

RE: OATMEAL

i have the 4 qt...8 qt will work, but they're heavy

and cumbersome to wash...

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Until/unless I get a small PC, I don't think I'll try your method. I don't like

oatmeal that much.

RE: OATMEAL

i have the 4 qt...8 qt will work, but they're heavy

and cumbersome to wash...

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Oatmeal is good for you, and it does not spike me. A lot of it, would

depend on what you put on it.

~~TINA~~

-- OATMEAL

I have heard that oatmeal is the one food that all diabetics can enjoy

without worry. Is this true?

Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/

To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to:

diabetes-unsubscribe

Hope you come back soon!

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