Fast Food
New Member
I already have a great meal plan, but I have never really studied into the fruit much. I wouldnt mind adding some.... my sugar intake a day, remains lower than 35.... so I could defiinitely afford some....
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Fast Food said:I already have a great meal plan, but I have never really studied into the fruit much. I wouldnt mind adding some.... my sugar intake a day, remains lower than 35.... so I could defiinitely afford some....
Frosty said:I have to disagree about the watermelon thing.
While the sugar from watermelons IS quite high in glycemic index (in the 70s), you have to realize what glycemic index is. Glycemic index is a measure of blood sugar increase based on 50g of the sugar in question. Since watermelon is mostly water, 50g of watermelon sugar takes a lot of watermelon to eat. How much? About 5 cups worth. Pineapple would take about 2.5 cups worth. Now a cup of chopped dates (dried) is 133g of carbs!
So you have to take glycemic load into account. Glycemic load is about the amount of sugar and the glycemic index. So while watermelon has a high GI, since it's not concentrated a normal serving has a moderate glycemic load.
To make sure you know what I mean by glycemic load, let me give you an example that will make it obvious.
If you ate 10g of pure glucose (very high GI), you could get a GREATER insulin response by eating a ton of APPLES (low GI) since the amount of sugar is so high. This shows how glycemic load matters.
So a cup of watermelon won't make you fat, but if you ate many cups of applesauce you COULD get fat.
Generally speaking it's best to stay away from the higher GI carbs unless it's within an hour or so of working out, but please take glycemic load into account with your eating.
