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August 19, 2013 at 10:56 am #9508
miazKeymasteri usually have some milk in my coffee in the morning.not a lot obviously, around 50g or so, roughly 2,5g of lactose.i know thats nothing, but i also know that milk is highly insulinic,so im just wondering if its by any means enough to spike my insulin?
August 19, 2013 at 11:24 am #195546
CainoParticipantNot enough for the world to come crashing down
August 19, 2013 at 12:47 pm #195547
John LaPlaca JrMemberNot enough for the world to come crashing down
+1I love your explaination lol
August 19, 2013 at 12:49 pm #195548
Peter HuntParticipantNot all of the sugar in milk is lactose anyway – I'm lactose intolerant so have lactofree stuff which is still 3g of sugars per 100ml(Not during ULC though - I prefer to keep carbs as low as possible)
August 19, 2013 at 1:19 pm #195549
Trevor G FullbrightModeratorNot all of the sugar in milk is lactose anyway - I'm lactose intolerant so have lactofree stuff which is still 3g of sugars per 100ml(Not during ULC though - I prefer to keep carbs as low as possible)
Lactose free milk still has lactose in it.They just add the lactase enzyme.Anyway, to the OP, while I agree it's not likely to make a huge difference, why not add heavy cream instead? It will taste better with much lower chance of raising insulin levels.
August 19, 2013 at 2:35 pm #195550
TCBParticipantNot all of the sugar in milk is lactose anyway - I'm lactose intolerant so have lactofree stuff which is still 3g of sugars per 100ml(Not during ULC though - I prefer to keep carbs as low as possible)
Lactose free milk still has lactose in it.They just add the lactase enzyme.Anyway, to the OP, while I agree it's not likely to make a huge difference, why not add heavy cream instead? It will taste better with much lower chance of raising insulin levels.
+1 And go to raw milk, which still has residual lactase in it, along with other helpful bacteria to process the lactose.But for the coffee.. why take the unnecessary "risk?" Enter, heavy whipping cream.
August 19, 2013 at 8:56 pm #195551
CainoParticipantI did the math, and almost full fat milk is the same as cream per 25ml serving, dont stress, you would breth in more carbs then you would drink the bastards in a coffee
August 19, 2013 at 9:01 pm #195552
Richard SchmittModeratorCanned Full Fat Coconut Milk is awesome
August 20, 2013 at 1:19 pm #195553
jjd040MemberCanned Full Fat Coconut Milk is awesome
+1for clarification, is it specifically lactose that makes milk raise insulin?
August 20, 2013 at 1:27 pm #195554
Richard SchmittModeratorThe lactose and proteins. Without fats, there is nothing to really blunt those responses. Thus the reasoning why its great to use PWO.
August 20, 2013 at 1:55 pm #195555
jjd040MemberThe lactose and proteins. Without fats, there is nothing to really blunt those responses. Thus the reasoning why its great to use PWO.
thanks. does this concern transfer to cheese? not pre-shredded/grated cheese.. more like full blocks. simply in terms of insulin response...
August 20, 2013 at 2:19 pm #195556
TCBParticipantThe lactose and proteins. Without fats, there is nothing to really blunt those responses. Thus the reasoning why its great to use PWO.
thanks. does this concern transfer to cheese? not pre-shredded/grated cheese.. more like full blocks. simply in terms of insulin response...
I'd say no. Unless, possibly, if you're eating a block at a time. And then you may have bigger problems to worry about than insulin spikes. 😉Â
August 20, 2013 at 2:28 pm #195557
Richard SchmittModeratorAgain without fats there isn't anything to blunt that response.
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