Tag Archives: type 2 diabetes

French Beans – The Healthy Ingredient!

French Beans – The Healthy Ingredient!

A household staple, French beans are uber versatile and easy to cook with. Turns out, these slender veggies are nutritional heavyweights too!

For the most part, the French bean has been a backstage vegetable – one that is available all year round and can be steamed, barbecued, marinated and pan-fried – all at a moment’s notice. But this understated yet versatile vegetable has several health surprises to offer. Crunchy cooked green beans naturally improve heart health, prevent colds and boost energy by being rich storehouses of antioxidants such as vitamin C, vitamin A, vitamins of the b complex group and iron. (Antioxidants and vitamins help people combat infection on a day-to-day basis). More importantly, French beans and other green beans also contain significant quantities of some lesser known nutrients such as manganese and molybdenum, which play a vital role in enhancing enzyme activity.

French Bean salad - a treat for your eye and stomach (using chevril and ground pepper )

French Bean salad – a treat for your eye and stomach (using chevril and ground pepper )

Build and Repair

Some of the powerful antioxidants contained in green beans belong to the carotenoid family. Carotenoids are responsible for the orange of red-orange pigments found in food such as tomatoes and carrots. However, in French beans, the chlorophyll that gives them their bright green color also keeps the red pigments from being visible. Much like other foods rich in carotenoids, French beans also prevent blood fats from getting oxidized. (When LDL or bad cholesterol comes in contact with harmful radicals, it becomes oxidized. Oxidized fat gives rise to inflammation, damages healthy tissue and also deposits as plaque in blood vessels).

french beans with onions

french beans with onions

 

In addition the vitamin K present in French beans promotes healing and strengthens connective tissue. Since French beans contain significant amount of the vitamin folate, they also improve the health of pregnant women and help prevent fetal birth defects. Recent studies have shown that the silicon in French beans is better absorbed by the body than silicon from other sources. This mineral nutrient is essential for bone health. Being high in dietary fiber, green beans also go a long way towards preventing type 2 diabetes. Fiber slows down the absorption of blood glucose, thereby improving the body’s sensitivity to insulin.

Store Them Right

Pick French beans that are lush green, tender, quick to snap and not dehydrated to the touch. Clean them in a solution of 1:10 of vinegar to water before cooking. Clean them before chopping to prevent the wastage of water-soluble nutrients such as vitamin C and those of the b complex group. Store raw beans in a perforated plastic bag in the vegetable compartment of the refrigerator. French beans pair well with other vegetables and are just as easily prepared in a crock pot, Moroccan tagine or a vegetable kadhai. No matter how you eat them, you can be sure you have made a healthy and nutritious choice.

Pan Seared French Beans

Pan Seared French Beans

 

Bright Idea: You can steam green beans lightly (for two or three minutes) and store them in the freezer for up to three months – the loss of nutrients will be minimal.

The rise and fall of sugar ;)

The rise and fall of sugar ;)

Worried that your fasting blood sugar was higher than the post-meal level, just relax! You’re neither alone nor abnormal.

Generally, fasting blood sugar (the value you get when you’re tested upon waking without any food intake) is also the baseline blood sugar level. But people with type 2 diabetes may have much higher morning blood sugars than the level they achieve after meals, for the rest of the day. So what spikes the blood sugar abnormally and how do you control it?

 FPG (fasting plasma glucose) test is the popular choice mainly because of its simplicity and low cost. In most cases it is accurate too. However, it is ideal that you get tested for both FPG and PP to understand how well you are managing your blood sugar. In fact, it is essential to focus on the number of hours a day your blood sugar lies in the range that causes complications (above 140 mg/dl or 7.7mmol/L). Obviously, if you start the day with a fasting level over 140 mg/dl, which goes up after each meal, then you are spending many hours a day in the danger zone. Some of the factors that raise fasting blood sugar levels are listed below.

sugar ride !!!

sugar ride !!!

 

High post-meal blood sugars

A high calorie/high carb meal results in excess glucose in the system, which cannot be metabolized easily. A heavy and late dinner is a common cause of elevated fasting blood glucose level.

 

Damaged basal insulin secretion

Irrespective of what you eat, tiny amounts of insulin are squirted into the blood stream in small pulses every Continue reading “The rise and fall of sugar ;)” »