Eating healthy, a crucial habit when you have diabetes, can be tricky when dining out. Here are 10 tips, especially curated for when dinner or lunch is at a Chinese restaurant.
June 30, 2015
Eating healthy, a crucial habit when you have diabetes, can be tricky when dining out. Here are 10 tips, especially curated for when dinner or lunch is at a Chinese restaurant.
Tea is one of nature's most powerful sources of antioxidants, and these free-radical scavengers help protect the body from the ravages of blood sugar, such as artery and nerve damage.
Best of all, tea is calorie-free.
It's easy to shovel big mouthfuls of food in with a fork.
These sauces, which often come with lemon chicken or crispy orange beef, spell double trouble for the Chinese restaurant diner.
They're typically sky-high in sodium, though, so ask for them on the side and use sparingly.
One-third cup of rice raises your blood sugar at the same rate as one slice of bread. You probably wouldn't think of eating six slices of bread during dinner, but you can easily load up on rice.
Avoid eggplant, which soaks up oil like a sponge. One dish of eggplant in garlic sauce can contain an mind-numbing 1,000 calories.
These dishes will give you more vegetables and more variety.
Pick these choices over egg rolls.
Because your meal likely already contains a day's worth of sodium or more, resist the temptation to add the duck, hot mustard, hoisin and soy sauces the restaurant provides.
The surest path to maximum calorie intake is to scoop white rice onto your plate and dump your sauce-laden entrée on top. The rice will soak up the sauce, which will make you want to eat every last bite of it.
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