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Good Carbs, Bad Carbs – Which Do You Eat?

Fresh fruits and vegetables, a source of good carbs

If you’re on a strict high-protein, very low-carbohydrate diet, you may be throwing the baby out with the bath water.

Starches and sugars are your body’s main source of energy. You need them to fuel your muscles. In fact, your brain needs 130 grams of carbs a day just to function properly! A carbohydrate-free diet, or a diet that’s too low in carbs, can be both dangerous and too low in nutrients.

If you’re on a high-protein diet, you still need carbohydrates. The good ones.

Some carbohydrates support your health while others drag it down. Too many of the bad carbohydrates raise your triglycerides and make your blood thicker, putting you at risk for heart disease. They also contribute to carbohydrate cravings and diabetes. The trick is to eat enough good carbs and very few bad ones. It’s a balancing act, but not too difficult once you understand the concept. So just which carbs are good and which are bad? And why?

Good carbs are whole foods from plants that contain both sugars and fiber. They include beans, whole grains, starchy vegetables, and fresh fruit. Substitute some of them for saturated (animal) fats and they can help lower your cholesterol. Their fiber binds to cholesterol, carrying it out of your body, and also keeps your blood sugar level.

Bad carbs are processed starches and sugars. They include sugar, honey, and refined grains like white flour and white rice. They are absorbed quickly and can trigger an insulin response, causing your blood sugar to drop suddenly.

Insulin resistance
When you eat any carbohydrate — either a sugar or a starch — your pancreas releases insulin to help your body utilize it. When you eat large quantities of carbohydrates, especially those that are refined and low in fiber, you run the risk of releasing too much insulin. Some of this excess insulin remains in your blood and causes high blood sugar. High blood sugar is another term for diabetes. When you make too much insulin too often, it can lead to diabetes.

Over time, your body may stop using insulin properly. This is called insulin resistance. It not only leads to diabetes, but heart disease, obesity, hypertension, and blood clots as well.

Good carbs, on the other hand, are higher in fiber and are digested slowly. They rarely lead to insulin resistance when you eat them in moderation. In fact, they tend to stabilize your blood sugar.

The health food industry is pushing bad carbs
Health food stores are filling up their shelves with junk foods. I’m disheartened with the amount of foods they’re selling that contain bad carbs.

Here are a few to watch out for and avoid as much as possible:

Net carbs: Pushing confusion to the limit
Read all product labels carefully. Some are very misleading. A growing number of snack foods now contain carbohydrates made from sugar alcohols called “net carbs.” This makes foods sound healthier and lower in calories than they are. Companies are saying these sugars “don’t count.” They do!

These sugar alcohols contain the same amount of calories as other sugars. If you’re trying to control your weight, all carbs count!

If you limit your carbohydrates as part of a weight-loss program, “net carbs” is deceptive. Every gram of carbohydrate is four calories, whether a food company “counts” it or not. A low-carb energy bar with two “net carbs” does not have eight calories from carbohydrates. The 25 grams of total carbohydrates it contains, when sugar alcohols are included, means that 100 of its calories come from carbs. Count all the carbs and all the calories.

Eat more good carbs:
Get 90 percent of your carbohydrates from whole foods. Beans, brown rice, corn tortillas, polenta, and starchy vegetables are all good carbs. Eat small amounts of them along with protein and vegetables rather than one large carbohydrate meal.

Some good carbs, such as potatoes, have gotten a bad rap because they’re high on the glycemic index. This means they turn into sugar quickly. But Nancy Appleton, Ph.D., author of Kick the Sugar Habit, is furious about this.

“The glycemic index is a hoax,” she told me. “If you eat any one of these foods alone that’s high on the glycemic index, it will raise your blood glucose. But if you eat them with protein and fat, you won’t. That’s the way we should eat!”

Don’t be afraid or reluctant to eat some carbohydrates with your meals if they are unprocessed and are eaten with plenty of vegetables, protein, and a little fat. Just make them the good carbs, and keep your portions small.

Appleton, Nancy. Lick the Sugar Habit, Avery Publishing, 1996.

Haas, Elson. Staying Healthy With Nutrition, Celestial Arts, 1992.

Tallmadge, Katherine. “Do Net Carbs Add Up?” Washington Post, February 25, 2004.

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