Sugar Cravings

5 comments
Halloween marked three months since the beginning of our family experiment. All eleven of us went on a modified version of the GAPS (Gut and Psychology Syndrome) diet beginning August 1st. We eliminated all fruit/grains/sugars from our home to starve the fungus in our bodies. (See this previous post.)

It has not been an easy three months. Everyone has struggled. Especially our 10-year-old son with type 1 diabetes. It's as if his body demanded sugar in some form. Nighttime has been especially difficult.

One lesson we've learned is that sugar cravings are not simply about willpower. The body's chemistry plays a vital role.

The biggest help for the cravings? Lacto-fermented foods. According to one of my daughters, "Sauerkraut with the apple cider vinegar dressing is NUMBER ONE, for sure. It causes die-off, yes, but it's the only thing that I've found that nips it in the bud pretty much immediately."

The biggest help for Colin, our son with diabetes? Homemade goat yogurt and goat kefir.

Coconut water kefir has helped others.

A mom on the website Pickl-It shares the story of her young son's journey out of "sugarholism":

During one of his food-stuffing suffocating, choking sprees, he’d packed his face, to-the-max, with bread. Digging it out of his mouth, a few wayward crumbs fell onto his clothing and chair. As I bent down to collect them, he let loose with a record-breaking scream, directly into my ear.

Blinded and deafened, lightning bolts of pain searing through my brain, I bowed down over the kitchen table, planting my hands on its hard surface for support. I gradually realized my right hand was grasping strange, bumpy objects. A platter of whole dill pickles! I’d fished them out of a large wooden-barrel, just a few hours earlier, while visiting a local meat market. “Old-fashioned, cured, just like Grandma made,” the sign over the barrel read.

Glancing at my son, I impulsively, grabbed one of the pickles, plugging his gaping mouth a split-second before he let loose with another ear-shattering scream.

Effective!

The tears immediately stopped flowing (so did his). Wide-eyed, he quietly removed the pickle, examined it, then returned it to his mouth, chomping off a large chunk, alligator-style. An angelic expression descended over his face – a sweet face – a face I was seeing for the very first time.

The rest of the family watched, too exhausted to eat, while he happily polished off the pickle – without raging, projectile vomiting, over-stuffing his mouth, gagging or choking.


There is scientific evidence for the power of lacto-fermented foods. A study funded by the National Institutes of Health found that bitter foods may share the same taste buds as sweet foods. In fact, the bitter foods may help turn off the sugar cravings because of the peptide cholecystokinin (CCK). According to the study,

CCK might excite the bitter taste and at the same time inhibit the sweet taste, so the bitter message gets to the brain.

Lactic acid, which is generated by lactic-acid bacteria during fermentation, creates a "bitter" flavor in the form of peptides.

No wonder the sauerkraut, yogurt, and kefir have helped!

When we began our experiment three months ago, I never dreamed we would contentedly celebrate Halloween with "stevia pop" (made with vanilla cream liquid stevia and mineral water) and homemade peppermint patties, and top off our day with homemade coconut cupcakes!

The best news? Colin's blood sugars stayed in range all day. Whereas Halloween used to require 20-30 units of fast-acting insulin, this year he used a total of six units for all three meals and our special dessert!

Now that's the best treat ever!

5 comments :

  1. Thank you for posting this article and your recipes. I am going to try to do this with my family. Something HAS to help! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you for all you do to help my family and others with your research and posts!
    Jane

    ReplyDelete
  2. That is fantastic news Andrea!!! wow!
    no more congee for you A? :(
    perhaps someday :)

    This was the direction I was going before our road got u-turned... I know I will have to head back into this direction.. but having some allergic to casein is tricky... I will have to learn to make Rice Yogurt or Almond Yogurt... /kefir..
    and frankly...

    I am JUST not THAT cool..
    yet

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anika,
    You can make coconut milk kefir with the same kefir grains.

    Goat milk might work for you guys, though.The lactose gets eaten by the kefir grains. The casein in the goat milk is a different type according to this article by Redwood Hill Farm.

    "Many people have difficulty with Casein especially the Alpha S1 casein found in cow milk and so are allergic to cow dairy. Studies have shown that goat milk is very low in Alpha S1 casein and primarily contains Alpha S2 casein. That is why those allergic to cow dairy can use goat milk products in their diets successfully."

    Not sure if that would be true for you, but coconut milk does work fine.

    We do miss the congee :)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Andrea, thank you for making all this info available to your readers. We have been making yogurt, cheese, etc for years out of cow milk. In the last several months we cannot get the milk to curdle anymore!! We tried every kind of milk(most expensive to cheapest) we could find. We left the gallon of milk out of the refrigerator for three days and the milk does not spoil!! We called one dairy company and asked for an explanation but they said they do not know why this happens. We cannot make yogurt or cheese anymore. How can we find out what is happening to the milk in this country? Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  5. So glad you raised this issue. I sure don't have the answer, but you might check with the following website:

    http://www.realmilk.com/

    ReplyDelete