5 Diabetes-Friendly Recipes to Make you Thankful for Thanksgiving

Ever wish you could just take the day off from diabetes? Especially a holiday like Thanksgiving? The smorgasbord of carb-heavy food is enough to make any person with diabetes run screaming from the table in pure frustration, and I wouldn't blame you at all if you did.

Instead of screaming in frustration, what if you had some diabetes-friendly Thanksgiving recipes for side dishes (and pie!) to add to your table? If that sounds better than screaming, today's your day. :)

It's not the turkey, it's the trimmings

Before we get to those sides, here's a bit of good news:  just like other meats, turkey contains no carbs, so it's not going to raise your blood sugar.  You can eat as much as you can hold without worrying about diabetes.

It's all those trimmings that will trip you up.  Most traditional Thanksgiving side dishes start off as carbs, and then we add even more sugar to them to dress them up.  Think about sweet potato casserole:  sweet potatoes naturally contain carbs, but when we melt marshmallows on top, now we have a serious sugar load to deal with.  Other Thanksgiving sides like cornbread dressing, mashed potatoes, and cranberry relish are heavy on carbs too.

So, what's a person with diabetes to do?

Diabetes-friendly Thanksgiving side dishes

I've rounded up a bunch of diabetes-friendly Thanksgiving recipes from my Registered Dietitian Nutritionist friends.  They have minimal added sugar, so they don't have excessive carbohydrate counts.  I hope you enjoy adding them to your Thanksgiving table:

And we can't have Thanksgiving without the pumpkin pie:

Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours

I hope your Thanksgiving turns out just right, no matter what you eat and no matter who you spend your holiday with.  Happy Thanksgiving from me to you.  :)

Julie Cunningham Nutrition

Julie Cunningham is a Registered Dietitian. She runs an online diabetes program designed to help women with diabetes thrive, even if they struggle with overeating.

Previous
Previous

How Insulin Works, for People who Don't Work in the Medical Field

Next
Next

How to Actually Stop Eating Sugar in 3 Simple Steps