minniecarousel
Chris Isaak fan
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2000
- Messages
- 13,925
Sad news.
Looks like she'll need to modify most of her recipes.
Looks like she'll need to modify most of her recipes.
Not a surprise unfortunately with the type of food she is famous for making. I often eat a link or two of sausage for breakfast and today I heard that that alone could up my cancer risk because of the nitrates. I think it's a warning that you cannot eat to excess and expect your body not to fight back in some way.
Her body isn't fighting back. It is breaking down. She friggin blew out her pancreas' ability to make insulin. Type 2 diabetes is SO preventable. If she had eaten properly and kept her weight down, she could have prevented this.
It will be interesting to see what she does next. I really never thought about diabetes, but I figured that at some point she would have a heart attack and need a quintuple bypass .
However, I don't know that I believe that she really eats as bad as her show makes it look. I don't think most chefs eat a lot of the stuff they show on TV. I am sure that she is making food that she loves and is a part of her life past present and future but I sure would hope that anyone with the smarts and savvy she has would also know that everything in moderation and eats sensibly the majority of the time. Of course I could be wrong and she could really eating a pound of butter and a jar of mayonnaise every day!
Personally I would like to see her continue with the types of recipes she does-- it is who she is- but to also talk about moderation. There is nothing wrong with what she cooks as long as you aren't having it 3 meals a day every day. TV shows and cookbooks aren't designed, for the most part, for you to only chose what it is in them and base your entire diet off of them for every meal. They give you ideas to try when it is appropriate. I don't think Paula Deen will have the same appeal if she is cooking with I Can't Believe it's Not Butter, Splenda and fat free yogurt.
My inlaws used to love Graham Kerr and he cooked a lot like Paula from what I understand. But his wife had a heart attack and he switched to all low fat healthy cooking and they said his recipes really stunk (we tried a few, they were awful!) and he got so preachy about everything that it was annoying to watch. I think his TV shows ended not long after his switch to the healthy stuff and not sure about cookbooks, I havent' checked. The one we had was pretty bad.
I hope her diabetes is under control and she can be happy with whatever choices she makes.
Diabetes is where the action is.
While, for virtually all of history, type 2 diabetes was an uncommon condition of adults, the disease has spread so much to all levels of American society that even kids are now developing the adult form. Researchers from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention predict that, by 2050, one in three adults will be diabetic.
The diabetes market is booming, handily surpassing growth of the oil industry, the housing market, even technology. It makes Bernie Madoffs billions look like small potatoes. In health, few markets are growing as fast as diabetes-not osteoporosis, not heart disease, not cancer.
Americans are getting fat from carbohydrate consumption, becoming diabetic along with it. While kids hanging around the convenience store gulp down 26 teaspoons of sugar in 32-ounce sodas and 56-grams-of-sugar in 16-ounce frozen ices, health-minded adults are more likely eating two slices of 6-teaspoons sugar-equivalent healthy whole grain bread, wondering why last years jeans are too tight.
The U.S. is not the only nation affected. Globally, 2.8% of the worlds population are diabetic, a number expected to double over the next 20 years.
Pharmaceutical companies boast double-digit growth for diabetes drugs, growth rates that keep profit-hungry investors happy. Mercks Januvia, for instance, introduced in 2006, recently catalogued 30% growth in sales, with annual sales approaching $1 billion. Recently FDA-approved Victoza, requiring once-a-day injection, is expected to reap $4 billion in sales per year for manufacturer Novo Nordisk. Such numbers can only warm a drug company CEOs heart.
Most diabetics dont just take one medication, but several. A typical regimen for an adult diabetic after a couple of years of treatment and following the dietary advice of the American Diabetes Association includes metformin, Januvia, and Actos, a triple-drug treatment that costs around $420 per month. Two forms of insulin (slow- and fast-acting), along with two or three oral medications, is not at all uncommon.....
I think it is more her ultimate weight than just her recipes.
I cook much the same way (and am older than she is). But I eat small portions of the fatty stuff. I eat a ton of fruits and vegetables. I'd rather eat a bell pepper than a bag of potato chips.
I totally quit dealing with artificial sweeteners and fat free (or reduced fat) items. I lost almost 40 pounds by doing this.
I only eat when I am hungry. When I am full I stop eating - even if 2/3 of my meal is still sitting there.
I went from a 14 to a 6 - with NO effort on my part.