RubaiyatOfAnyone · 20/05/2021 17:56
My dd is soon to have her 6th birthday. She has invited 4 friends out to play and have a birthday lunch. One of her friends has very recently been diagnosed with Diabetes T1 and is still coming to terms with it. She might not come because she feels bad about the food she can’t eat and self conscious about checking blood sugar levels and maybe having to inject etc.
If she does come, I am trying to put together a party menu that is as diabetes friendly as possible so she doesn’t feel she is missing out on whatever other people are having.
I have looked at internet info, but wondered if anyone with first hand experience might be able to give me some suggestions?
So far I thought of:
Chicken drumsticks
Cheese cubes & pickled onions on sticks (straight from my 70s childhood, but beloved by dd)
Strawberries
Mixed berries (blueberries, raspberries, blackberries etc)
Toasted wholemeal pitta with hummus (or possibly refried beans, grated cheese, guacamole & salsa?)
Apple slices
Individual small packets of crisps? (I know potato isn’t ideal, but at least this way it’s an exact known quantity. Or not worth it?)
Salted nuts? Advice seems conflicted on whether this is okay?
Any other good ideas?
I should say there will also be a birthday cake and some party ring biscuits because dd has requested specially and it is her birthday, but i want to minimise the “missing out”. I can make the birthday cake with stevia rather than sugar if that would help? Sorry, i’m a bit clueless!
TheWeeDonkeyIsMySpiritAnimal · 20/05/2021 18:02
supernooodle · 20/05/2021 18:02
Hi, my advice to you would be to not worry too much.
Party's generally include a lot of running around especially at age 6 so Mum would benefit for not trying to keep her in range whilst she's there.
The only thing I would avoid during a party would be full sugar fizzy drinks, sweets like haribo. Everything else would be fine. Mum would probably give her child things like cocktail sausages, cheese, carrot sticks if she's trying to not make the child's levels spike but like I said as there is so much running around Mum will be trying to avoid the child going low at the same time.
The child will want to be like her friends so I would avoid making things just for her. There's nothing wrong with letting her child eat exactly what her friends are eating, she will just need to carb count to make sure the correct amount of insulin is given.
You're very kind to want to accommodate, it's not the easiest thing to understand.
I hope my post makes sense. Feel free to ask questions.
GlutenFreeGingerCake · 20/05/2021 18:07
What might help is doing the food in party boxes or ready plated rather than a buffet, so she gets a set portion and it's easy to count carbs. I would avoid nuts with young children as a bit of a choking hazard.
RubaiyatOfAnyone · 20/05/2021 18:24
RubaiyatOfAnyone · 20/05/2021 18:33
In general, Would you all say it is better to have the lower GI foods i’ve mentioned, or better to have a more mixed standard “party food” (so probably the above plus a couple of chocolate fingers, part rings and a portion of birthday cake) but have it all exactly portioned out and have the carb info ready (as far as i can from packets) so mum can work out what’s necessary?
Squiggy · 20/05/2021 18:35
Low carb brownies are quite a good treat. Again she will still have to inject like with anything but it sounds like if they are not allowing cake etc they might be having issues controlling her sugars whenever she has anything high carb so a lower carb sweet treat might be nice?
RubaiyatOfAnyone · 20/05/2021 18:40
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Squiggy · 20/05/2021 18:49
Pythonesque · 20/05/2021 18:59
supernooodle · 20/05/2021 19:29
Cermit · 21/05/2021 10:21
Oh, it is really hard to organize such parties with restrictions. But it makes the menu more interesting!
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