If there are no opiod peptides, what would cause the cravings in this case? Beta-carbolines?RRM wrote:Of course its bad. Its cooked and relatively high in protein.Rivera wrote: So spaghetti gluten-free has no opioid peptides at all? So not that bad finally?
By the way, on a pure wai diet, how long before the cravings stop? How long before the body completely clear out what was causing them? I saw someone on the forum saying that after 3 months still she had some. Does it take so long?
What do you think about the glycemic charge?It measures the effect of the consumed food on the insulin.
So, not before, but the total impact.
Again, the GI has no meaning at all.
Yes, but my needs are 100 gr, so let's imagine I just eat spaghetti with nothing added, not fat, nothing. The portion containing more sugar will have more effect on the insulin? Even if both trigger insulin peaks, the one with more sugar should be the worst?Health is not about "what if",But if both meals weigh 100gr exactly
but what you do.
You should eat according to your direct energy needs,
as that is what prevents insulin peaks.
Even if all your meals are 100 gram, you still dont know when to take them
to prevent those insulin peaks.
Soon, I will start to believe that 100gr of foods containing 10gr of sugars will have more effect on insulin than 100gr of foods containing 80gr of sugars.
So for example, on this pic: http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/200 ... k650.5.jpgSome add water. It depends on what you do.When we pan fry the ckicken, it's inside oil, right? Or is there water added?
if there is only oil as liquid, when you dip one chicken inside, a big quantity of oil will be on it, right? How much it may represent in teaspoons? More than 10? That was what I was wondering.
But if there are proteins, there will be appetite enhancing anyway? After, I don't know if the results will be on cravings than with low proteins content, but still it's here at least. So the problem is not really resolved.both low in protein (little appetite enhancing)
But for the sugar, the more there is, the more likely insulin response may be high (at least I guess, still waiting for confirmation about this )
Pasta/bread does have a lot of sugar. If I add fat, there will be a lot. About proteins, it seems that there are not so much (for you maybe it's a lot though). So it can be a good munch food too.If you simply add fat to a favorite munch food,
it does not make that munch food low in protein.
Hence it does not make that a good munch food.