Fruit Sugar VS Table Sugar
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konatreehugger
Posts: 17
So, I eat a lot of fruit and veggies and am ALWAYS going over my sugar allowance in my food diary. Is there anyway to know if I can just not count the fruit sugar? How can I use this as a tool?
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Replies
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I go over my sugar quite a bit due to fruits & veggies. What I do is make a note at the bottom of the log in the note section how many sugars are due to fruits & veggies. I call them natural sugar. That way I know if I'm keeping the "other bad" sugar under control.
I wouldn't not put them in your diary at all because they still have calories.0 -
If you are eating fruit, I would not worry about it as long as you are not over doing it with other sugars. Fruit tends to get a bad name but it is full of nutrients and antioxidents that our bodies need!0
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You can change from tracking sugar to tracking what ever you would like. If sugar is not a real problem, you can choose things that are. Go to settings...0
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I agree with the previous posters. I eat fruits and veggies anytime I want. I don't go overboard on the fruit but I don't limit it just because of the natural sugar content. I do add it to log for the calories though.0
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Thanks for the great ideas!
Where I live, outside I have pineapple, papaya, starfruit, guava, lilikoi (passion fruit), Teeny bananas, and so much more! It's hard NOT to eat them everyday!
I don't eat a lot of table sugar, just occasionally. Thanks again for the good info!0 -
I've been wondering the same thing. I always keep a lot of fruit in the house so I don't eat something I shouldn't.0
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It's true that fruit sugar is good for you, but sugar is sugar, and if you're pre diabetic or something like that you should watch it.0
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if you look up how many calories it is you could just add a quick calorie thing ie banana 95 calories so the suar wont come up0
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Thanks for the great ideas!
Where I live, outside I have pineapple, papaya, starfruit, guava, lilikoi (passion fruit), Teeny bananas, and so much more! It's hard NOT to eat them everyday!
I don't eat a lot of table sugar, just occasionally. Thanks again for the good info!
Sounds like a great place to live!0 -
In reality the body does not know the difference in the type of sugar................It just says, hey there's sugar and sends an insulin response - that goes for anyone whether you have insulin resistance or not.0
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sooo, then I should count my fruit sugars??0
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It's true that fruit sugar is good for you, but sugar is sugar, and if you're pre diabetic or something like that you should watch it.
Obviously sugar is sugar, but how your body reactes to sugars such as table sugar, honey, syrups, etc. is very different from how it reactes to foods that have both sugar and fiber, such as fruit. The more fiber, the slower your body is to digest the food and the slower it releases insulin to process the sugar. This is why you don't get the same "sugar rush" after eating an Apple that you do after eating the same volume of Oreos. Because insulin isn't released at the same rate.0 -
I go over on sugar every day but deduct the fruit and veg sugar and it's ok, I saw on some website that a average person can have 100g of natural sugar on top of non natural sugar, I'm assuming that's for someone not watching their cals....0
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sooo, then I should count my fruit sugars??
If you count calories, then yes it should be counted. The fruits you are eating are not low sugar, low calorie foods.
I no longer count calories, but I don't eat processed foods anymore either. I only eat fat, protein, vegetables, limited fruit and dairy so I have learned to eat intuitively.
However, I don't eat the fruits you mentioned very often. Like a couple of times per year.0 -
I go over on sugar every day but deduct the fruit and veg sugar and it's ok, I saw on some website that a average person can have 100g of natural sugar on top of non natural sugar, I'm assuming that's for someone not watching their cals....
That is like eating 24 teaspoons of sugar a day..................I don't believe that to be correct in whoever said that. That will have ill effects on anyone's body - metabolic issues or not.0 -
I mostly eat papaya, lilikoi and guava... limited banana and pineapple. I probably eat up to 40 grams of fruit sugar a day... I have no medical issues, that I am aware of...however, I am constantly wanting sweets. my daily diet includes meats, veggies (that I grow) and fruit. I have chocolate occasionally, same with breads and other carbs.0
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In reality the body does not know the difference in the type of sugar................It just says, hey there's sugar and sends an insulin response - that goes for anyone whether you have insulin resistance or not.
There is such a thing as metabolic shunting. Your body does know the difference. Ask any biochemist.0 -
Sugar is pretty much sugar, no matter what. The good thing about fruit sugar is that you get all the goodies with fruit-fiber, antioxidants, vitamins. With sugary items, you get trans fat and lots of extra calories. I think if you stay away from premade sugar items and you know what they are, you don't need to count your sugar.0
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I was curious about this too because I like to eat 3 servings of fruit a day (sometimes more) so I asked my aunt who is a dietician. She said that natural sugars are ok and not to worry about them. Just don't eat more than 24 grams (6 teaspoons) of sugar a day.0
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In reality the body does not know the difference in the type of sugar................It just says, hey there's sugar and sends an insulin response - that goes for anyone whether you have insulin resistance or not.
There is such a thing as metabolic shunting. Your body does know the difference. Ask any biochemist.
This. The body doesn't discern where the sugar comes from (processed or natural) because the chemical structure (carbon skeleton, etc.) for fructose is the same regardless of its source. Fructose (found in fruit) and sucrose (50:50 ratio of fructose to glucose) are however chemically different from one another as one is a disaccaharide. So in layman's terms, sucrose is sucrose and fructose is fructose.
You can go here if you want to see more interesting info on these two from a man who is very well versed in nutrition: http://www.alanaragonblog.com/2010/01/29/the-bitter-truth-about-fructose-alarmism/0
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