I have a friend that is on the gi diet, glycemic diet, and she told me that new potatoes do not have any carbs in them and they are ok to eat on her diet. Her diet almost seems the same as the south beach diet just rewritten by some one else. Does anyone have any experience with this question? I told her that I did not believe that to be true but she insists.
I have a friend that is on the gi diet, glycemic diet, and she told me that new potatoes do not have any carbs in them and they are ok to eat on her diet. Her diet almost seems the same as the south beach diet just rewritten by some one else. Does anyone have any experience with this question? I told her that I did not believe that to be true but she insists.
Did she tell you that 2-3 new potatoes is a serving, very small portion and a once in a while thing. It is very much the same diet , but we don't do the phase 1 like SBD.
Chari
People get funny ideas in their heads about nutrition sometimes that they just cannot be convinced out of. I have an aunt who swears up and down until she is blue in the face that you cannot get vitamin A anywhere but meat (although I did get her to concede that spinach *might* have *some* vitamin A in it). It doesn't matter how much proof you give her - she won't believe it anyway.
All fruits and vegetables have at least some carbohydrates in them - the important things are what kind and how much. As potatoes and other root vegetables (as well as some other veggies like corn or peas) mature, certain nutrients in them convert into starches for long-term energy storage. So the more mature these vegetables are, the more starch is in them. That is why new baby potatoes (not just little potatoes) have a lower GI than mature russets.