speaking of alcohol….

I am sure you are not all tea-totalers out there….

I would like a more definitive guide on how to sucessfully (occasionally) alter
my moods with alcohol. My main weakness is for microbrews, though often my wife
and I will split a bottle of wine. I know the beers are full of calories, yet it
seems all carbo-counting guides don’t let you include alcohol. I am also aware
of the rule: Go to bed with a glucose of at least 150 if you have alcohol on
board. I know the phisiology behind the rule.

What I would really like to see is a guide that would be specific for your
favorite poison on how to avoid glucose highs and lows.

Scott
If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much room….

3 Responses to “speaking of alcohol….”

  1. alexis_9 Says:

    Greetings,

    Here’s my thoughts, strategy and some info on how to deal with alcohol. I carry
    the "Eating Out Food Counter" by Annette Natow and Jo-Ann Heslin ISBN
    #0-671-89471-4…

    Its got serving size, calories, fat, carbs, cholesterol and sodium counts for
    thousands and thousands of items at dozens of restaurants and thousands of
    common food items… Its paperback and getting a bit beat up now, and a pain to
    have to carry around all the time, but is really quite helpful. Everything from
    Double D to Denneys, Micky D’s, Au Bon Pain, Starbucks and Dominos… Even if
    you don’t find the particular restaurant you’re at, there’s sure to be something
    similar in there to what you are about to eat, so I even use it with home cooked
    foods if I can’t get a count off of packaging or recipies…


    Necessary waiver of accuracy, validity, responsibility and all that jazz. As
    always YMMV, no waranty written or implied, Caveat Emptor, etc…

    The specific reason I’m writing you about this, though, is its sections on Beer
    and Ale, Drink Mixers and Wine… This book dosen’t have listings for any
    specific microbrews, only major piss in a can brewskis -(don’t get me wrong -
    there is very much a time and place for something like a case of Olympia or
    Pabst Blue Ribbon (12g. CHO per 12oz. each), usually involving the beach, sun
    and sand, but that’s about it.

    This book says the following about beer in general…
    Ale, Brown 10oz, 8g CHO
    Ale, Pale 10oz, 12g CHO
    Beer, Light 12oz, 5g CHO
    Beer, Regular 12oz, 13g CHO
    Lager 10oz, only 4g CHO
    Pilsner Lager 7oz, 13g CHO
    Stout 10oz, only 6g CHO

    In general, I usually count a 12oz. beer for 12-15 g CHO or, more accurately, I
    shoot a unit per beer, wine is nill, unless its something really trashy like
    boons or a wine cooler (Bartles and James Peach has 33g. CHO) or a Port… But
    best of all is that Vodka and Scotch have nill, zip, zero, nada, none. So a
    brain holiday with vodka rocks, neat scotch or a decent Pinot costs me no
    insulin and no high blood sugars.

    My personal rules/guidelines on drinking, diabetes and pumping; check to see if
    the site might need changing in the next 12-18 hours and change it if so (site
    changing while intoxicated is not a recommeded manouver), test more frequently,
    tolerate slightly higer numbers to further reduce risk of lows while drinking;
    with beer and wine, drink as much H2O as beer or wine; with hard drinks, glass
    of H2O per mixed drink or roughly double fluid volume in H2O…

    Again, as always, YMMV, no waranty written or implied, Caveat Emptor, etc…

    Anyone know of a database of nutritional values that runs on a palm pilot or a
    single purpose handheld widget?

    Regards,
    John

  2. Sharlene Latia Says:

    John,

    Apreciate your contribution….will take a look at that book.

    Scott

  3. jerrold16 Says:

    << But best of all is that Vodka and Scotch have nill, zip, zero, nada,
    none. >>

    Begorrah, laddie, me knew that already! :-)
    Patrick
    Hearing bagpipes in the distance.

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