We have had some wonderful transformations in the clinic over the last 20 years which warms my heart and it is why I do what I do. I want that for every pateint that walks in the door. This past few months the transformations have been even more amazing and one of the aspects of the wellbeing journey we discuss is Food/Diet. It can be a trigger for some, however we found that when we focus on a simple low insulin type diet, patients lose fat and inflammatory symptoms get better much faster. A low-insulin diet isn’t about perfection—it’s about creating steady blood sugar, reducing inflammation, and supporting metabolic and hormonal balance.
The role of insulin in your body
Insulin is a hormone that your pancreas secretes into your bloodstream after you have eaten. It enables the glucose from your food to enter your cells, where it is burned for energy. If insulin is not doing its job properly, less glucose will be burnt for energy and more of it will be converted into fat. Insulin is a Growth Hormone!!!
Some of the fat is stored around your body, just under your skin, and some of it accumulates in your liver. Having too much fat in your liver is a classic sign of elevated insulin. There are plenty of other signs and symptoms.
Chronically elevated insulin can also contribute to:
Lowering insulin gently and consistently helps the body shift toward healing, repair, and stable energy.
1. Build Meals Around Protein
Start here—it’s the anchor.
2. Choose Smart Carbohydrates
Not all carbs are equal.
Focus on lots of Colorful Plants:
Limit/ Avoid
3. Don’t Fear Healthy Fats
Fats help slow glucose absorption and keep insulin steady.
4. Eat in Rhythms (Not Constantly)
Frequent snacking keeps insulin elevated.
5. Pair, Don’t Spike
Avoid eating carbs alone.
6. Start the Day Right
Breakfast sets the tone.
Better choices:
Avoid:
7. Support the Gut–Insulin Connection
This is where your work shines.
Here’s the simple sequence to teach yourself:
1. Start with fiber-rich vegetables – Slows gastric emptying, forms a viscous “gel,” and blunts glucose absorption.
2. Then eat protein – Increases satiety signals (GLP-1, PYY) and helps preserve lean mass.
3. Add healthy fats – Further slows digestion and extends fullness (best paired with fiber/protein).
4. Starchy Fiber Rich Carbs last – After fiber/protein/fat, carbs absorb more slowly → smaller glucose/insulin spikes and steadier energy.
Why this matters for real life: this “carb-last” pattern is easy to remember, repeatable at restaurants, and plays well with most dietary styles (Mediterranean, lower-carb, etc.).
Example: Start meals with a handful of non-starchy veg or a side salad, take a few bites of your protein, add a bit of fat (olive oil, avocado, nuts), and finish with the starch (You might find that a small bite is all you want).
Breakfast:
Eggs, sautéed spinach, avocado
Lunch:
Grilled chicken salad with lots of colorful veggies and leaves plus olive oil + pumpkin seeds
Dinner:
Salmon, roasted Brussels sprouts, small portion quinoa
Optional:
Herbal tea, handful of nuts if truly hungry
Last but least Movement Matters: Move after you eat for 5 minutes especially after Dinner.
In Closing
Small, consistent shifts that stabilize insulin don’t just change metabolism—they quietly transform energy, skin, mood, and long-term health. I hope this post helps you on your journey and begin to think of Food at Medicine and that the Quality of the inputs determines the outputs. If you would like support on your Transformation Journey please reach out CLICK HERE
My Best and have a Healthy Week
Dr Pia
