Please help me understand....not quite
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Please help me understand....not quite
| Sun, 04-17-2005 - 5:11pm |
there yet.
Okay..If there is fiber in whole grain bread...while is it necessary to eat a a carb competitor with it if fiber itself is a carb competitor. I understand why a carb competitor is used..but if theres already fiber in the carb...then...I don't get that part..I hope i don't seem ignorant ..hehe..its just that I like to completly understand why I am doing things instead of just doing them. I have learned an enourmous amount of info about nutrition from everyone here...The more I know the more successful I will be.
Okay..If there is fiber in whole grain bread...while is it necessary to eat a a carb competitor with it if fiber itself is a carb competitor. I understand why a carb competitor is used..but if theres already fiber in the carb...then...I don't get that part..I hope i don't seem ignorant ..hehe..its just that I like to completly understand why I am doing things instead of just doing them. I have learned an enourmous amount of info about nutrition from everyone here...The more I know the more successful I will be.

I believe you are right. A high fiber bread is an acceptable carb because it is slowing down digestion. I think of it as 'giving your body something to "chew" on'. Adding a carb competitor to your high fiber bread, such as a good fat, will further slow the digestion process.
Here is something I saved on the topic of carb competitors that was posted here somewhere:
On the South Beach Diet™, anything you eat that slows the digestion of sugars in carbs is, by definition, good. Slowing down digestion of carbs results in your body producing less insulin. Less insulin means a less dramatic drop in blood sugar. A diminished rise and fall of sugar means less hunger later. Here are three important food components that will slow down digestion.
1. Fiber. Fiber is the major factor that slows the absorption of sugar. That's why highly processed oatmeal, for example, is worse, diet-wise, than the steel-cut variety. The latter has all the fiber still intact, and before the stomach can get to the sugars in the oatmeal, it has to separate them from the fiber. Once isolated, the fiber passes undigested through your system; its dietary importance comes from its ability to slow digestion down. It is an obstacle to digestion--a good one.
2. Fat. Fat, too, slows the speed at which your small intestine accesses the sugars you've eaten. That's why it's better to have a little olive oil or some low-fat cheese on your bread than it is to eat the bread alone. For the same reason, having a baked potato topped with low-fat sour cream is better than eating it plain. The calorie count might be higher, but the fat contained in the sour cream will slow down the digestive process, thereby lessening the amount of insulin that the potato prompts your body to make.
3. Acid. Acidic foods, such as lemon and vinegar, also slow the digestive process, therefore cutting back on the rise in blood sugar. You can dress salads or vegetables in both and enjoy the benefit. Even sourdough bread will slow digestion because, although it is not high in fiber, it is acidic.
Hope this helps!