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Oct
26

Does Sugar Affect Immunity? Swiss Apple Pie

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CTF is preparing for the Fall and Winter holidays by discussing how sugar and carbohydrate intake affect immunity and how you can help keep you and your children well through the festivities.  We will offer daily recipes at the bottom of each post.  We will return to the Bone Broth Marathon at the completion of this series.

These posts are longer than my usual, to-the-point-here’s-the-recipe posts.   If you’re just here for the recipes, scroll down.  It’s at the end of the post.

 

What is a Carbohydrate?

A carb is made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.  All carbs are built of simple sugar molecules called monosaccharides and can be places into three categories: sugar, starch and fiber.

Fiber

Fiber can not be broken down by the human intestine so we do not absorb monosaccharides from it. When looking at the carb count of a food or dish, you can subtract the carbohydrates from fiber as they are not absorbed by the body.  Fiber also slows digestion, helping to smooth out the peaks of carbs hitting your system.

Sugars and Starches

All sugars and starches, both simple and complex, ultimately break down in the body into monosaccharides called glucose, fructose and galactose.  While starches do not taste as sweet as sugar, the body breaks them down into monosaccharides and processes them them the same way as a sugar.

  • Fructose is associated mostly with fruit and starchy vegetables such as corn or it can come from the breakdown of complex carbohydrates.   Fructose skips circulation and is shuttled straight to the liver for processing.
  • Galactose is from mammal milk.  The body converts galactose to glucose.
  • Glucose is used to fuel the cells of the body by circulating through the blood stream.

If there is more glucose circulating than the body can use, the liver and muscles store it as glycogen. If the body doesn’t need any glycogen at the time, it becomes fat. That is why when you loose weight in a healthy way, your fat is used up before muscle as it is the easiest form of glycogen for the body to access when it is needed.

What We’ve Learned

So what we have learned previously is that about half of the food intake in most Americans is broken down by the body into glucose, unneeded glucose is converted to glycogen, and unneeded glycogen is stored as fat.

That explains a lot as to where the obesity and diabetes epidemic is coming from in us US, doesn’t it?

Next post we’ll look at how that rising glucose in the blood stream affects insulin, which in turn affects the immune system.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: Some of the links in some of my posts are affiliate links. When you click them you allow me to cover a small portion of the cost of this blog. Blogging isn’t cheap and I appreciate your support so we can keep churning out awesome recipes. Using my affiliate link is like leaving a tip. Thank you. You can read more of our disclaimers here.

 

KerryAnn Foster runs Cooking Traditional Foods, the longest running Traditional Foods Menu Mailer on the internet. KerryAnn has ten years of traditional foods experience and is a former Weston A. Price Foundation chapter leader.  Read about KerryAnn’s journey to health through multiple miscarriages, celiac disease, food allergies and intolerances, obesity, adrenal fatigue and heavy metals.

Founded in 2005, CTF helps you feed your family nourishing foods they will love.  With two choices of Menu Mailers, multiple eBooks, Print Books and a Gluten and Dairy-Free Traditional Foods eCourse, KerryAnn makes traditional foods easy, accessible, affordable and family friendly for everyone.

KerryAnn founded Nourished Living Network, a network for traditional food and natural living bloggers, in 2011. NLN provides support, publicity and networking opportunities for bloggers all across the traditional foods spectrum. Our Recipe Gallery features recipes from the twenty-four member blogs and growing.

 

 



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Comments

  1. jpatti says:

    Fiber can be broken down into two categories… soluble and insoluble. We do digest the soluble to some extent. But it’s a tricky thing to quantify.

    My recipe for apple betty is similar to yours, much simpler than making a real pie: http://ornery-geeks.org/text/cooking/baking/applebetty.php

    I use sprouted wheat flour for the streusel which works pretty well. Honestly, coconut flour doesn’t work well having tried it. The dessert got eaten, but had complaints about not being as good as usual. ;)

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CookingTF is a blog about nutrient-dense foods. We provide recipes for a variety of family-friendly, kid-approved meals, snacks and desserts. We follow in the tradition of Dr. Weston A Price.

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