Quick Answer: Although candy and soda are generally labeled as backstabbing foes, the undisputed heavyweight champion of all foods for blood sugar is liquid sugar posing as health food … in other words, fruit juice and sweetened smoothies.
Liquid sugar is void of the process of digestion, completely unlike solid food. It circumvents the body’s natural “full” signals, and floods the liver with fructose and glucose so quickly that it can get pathological. This leads to a sharper, quicker insulin spike compared with getting the same amount of table sugar, putting immediate pressure on your metabolic engine.”
For the “Management” (Diabetics And Pre-diabetics) Folk
The Name of the Enemy: 100% Juice (Orange, Apple, Grape)

The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
You probably consider fruit healthy, and so you would think it follows that fruit juice is okay. But in terms of blood sugar, it’s metabolically pretty similar to downing a full-sugar soda. When you juice a fruit, you strip away the fiber — the internal “safety net” that slows absorption. Because without fiber, sugar hits your bloodstream like a tsunami instead of lapping ashore.
The Fix: Your “Dress Up Your Carbs” Approach
Never eat carbs “naked” (solo). If you have to consume carbs, they must be “clothed” in protein, fat or fiber to buffer them.
Actionable Steps:
- The Swap: Trade the morning glass of juice for whole fruit. One orange has roughly 12g of sugar, but is loaded with fiber and chewing time. A cup of juice is the sugar of 3-4 oranges (36-48g) we drink in a flash.
- The Food Sequencing Technique: Studies confirm the sequence in which you eat food is just as important as what you’re eating.
- Step 1: Eat your vegetables first.
- Step 2: Consume protein and fats (meat, eggs, cheese) Thereafter.
- Step 3: Save your starches and sugars (rice, fruit, bread) for last.
- Outcome: This physical barrier within the stomach may reduce post-meal blood sugar spikes by as much as 73%.

For the “Weight Losers” (Metabolic Healthy-oriented)
The Evil One: “Low-Fat” Sweetened Yogurts &Snack Bars
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
Possibly some sort of low-fat food is being marketed, because every time food manufacturers strip fat from something to make it “diet-friendly” there is no taste left. To fix this, they add sugar. Low-fat fruit yogurt is regularly packed with as much sugar as ice cream. Insulin is the “storage hormone” for weight loss. As long as you have lots of insulin (and that’s what the hidden sugar in your diet causes), your body is physically unable to tap into stored fat and use it for energy.
The Fix: The 10g Cap & Full-Fat Plan
You have to move from counting calories to controlling insulin response. Fat does not raise insulin; sugar does.
Actionable Steps:
- The Label Scan: Put the “Total Carbohydrates” aside for just a moment and focus, instead, on “Added Sugars.” If a single serving of salmon has more than 5g of added sugar, then put it back on the shelf.
- The Full-Fat Switch: Buy full-fat, plain Greek yogurt. Because the fat is satiating (filling), you won’t feel hungry enough to snack an hour later.
- The Flavor Hack: Sweeten it yourself. Toss in a few whole berries or splash of liquid stevia. You’ll never put as much sugar in by hand as a machine does in a factory.
Optimizers (Perf & Energy)
The Enemy at Hand: Instant Oatmeal and Obliterated Grains
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
Oats are marketed as a heart-healthy food, however “Instant” or “Quick” oats are highly milled. The grain is first steam cooked then rolled and smashed into little bits. This increased surface area means that your digestive enzymes can convert it into glucose quickly. This leads to a “sugar crash” two hours later, inducing brain fog and lethargy — the very opposite of optimization.
The “Solution” – Retrogradation (Cooking + Cooling) The Solution to Resistant Starch: RETROGRADATION
Making Carbohydrates ‘Less Digestible’ You can chemically change the structure of carbs by making them “less digestible”, which makes them into Resistant Starch. This feeds your gut bacteria, rather than sending your blood sugar through the roof.

Actionable Steps:
- Preparation: Cook your starches (potatoes, rice or steel-cut oats) in advance.
- Cooling: Refridgerate for 12-24 hours. When the starch cools, its molecules reconfigure back into a form that resists digestion.
- The Reheat: You can reheat your food, and apparently the resistant starch structure is still largely intact. This procedure may significantly reduce the glycemic response.
For the “Caregiver” Crowd (Family & Elderly Care)
The Enemy of the Day: Boxed Breakfast Cereals
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
Cereal And Toast: The Roller Coaster Effect_PROVIDE LOVED ONES WITH CEREAL AND TOAST. The ‘stress hormone’ Cortisol–a natural, morning-level high. Cortisol has the effect of making the body resistant to insulin. So the body least of all can deal with a dose of sugar at breakfast. A high-starch breakfast ensures that his or her blood sugar will spike and plummet for the entire day, and your ward (who is not feeling well to begin with) won’t help but be moody and lethargic.
The Fix: The Savory Breakfast Protocol
The objective is to start to control the blood sugar as soon as you get out of bed, so that your day will be calm overall.
Actionable Steps:
- Scrub the “Beige”: Get toast, cereal and waffles off the breakfast table.
- Protein is key: Starting off your day with eggs, leftovers for dinner (chicken/meat) or cottage cheese, helps to keep blood sugar balanced.
- The 30-Gram Rule: Try to get 20-30 grams protein in the first meal. It is a hunger suppressant (suppresses the appetite hormone, ghrelin) and that helps control those morning munchies.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the worst food for blood sugar?
The most egregious are liquid sugars masquerading as health food, like fruit juices and sweetened smoothies. Because liquid sugar has not had to wait for digestion before entering the tiny intestine, where it would trigger the body’s fullness signals, it rushes the liver more quickly than table sugar does and causes a higher spike of insulin.
Is it metabolically equivalent to eat whole fruit versus drinking 100% fruit juice?
No. Whole fruit has fiber that serves as a “safety net” to slow down sugar absorption, but juicing does away with the fiber. A glass of juice is metabolically no better for you than drinking soda because sugar goes into your bloodstream immediately; one glass has as much sugar as 3 or even 4 whole fruits.
Do I spike my blood sugar if I eat some things before others?
Yes. Studies show that “Food Sequencing” can lower glucose surges by 73%. The proper sequence is vegetables, protein and fat, with starches last. This then forms a barrier in the stomach and slows down the body’s absorption of carbohydrates.
Why are low-fat products bad when you are trying to lose weight?
When manufacturers strip out fat from foods, like yogurt, they tend to add lots of sugar to make up for the reduction in taste. This added sugar elevates insulin, the body’s “storage hormone.” So long as insulin is high, the body is physiologically incapable of burning its fat stores to produce energy.
How is starch (e.g., rice, potatoes) in terms of digestibility affected by cooking and then cooling it?
If you cook the starches then get them cold, in a refrigerator 12 to 24 hours, it converts the structure of those starches into “chloric acid.” This process makes the carbohydrate slower to digest, even if it is reheated later, and instead of quickly raising blood sugar levels in the body, feeds gut bacteria.
References
Liquid vs. Solid Sugar Absorption:
- Study: DiMeglio, D. P., & Mattes, R. D. (2000). Liquid versus solid carbohydrate: effects on food intake and body weight.
- Entity: Purdue University.
- Subject/Method: Equal amounts of calories were consumed in the form of soda (liquid) and jelly beans (solid).
- Outcome: The liquid sugar group didn’t make up for it by eating less food later, which resulted in a dramatic weight gain while the solid sugar group decreased its subsequent consumption on its own. It showed that liquid sugar short-circuits the body’s appetite controls.
Food Sequencing (The “Dress Carbs” Technique):
- Study: Shukla, A. P., et al. (2015). Order of Ingested Food Gestalt Affects Postprandial Glucose and Insulin Levels.
- Entity: Weill Cornell Medical College.
- Subject/Method: Subjects with Type 2 diabetes were fed the same meal (ciabatta bread, orange juice, chicken breast, salad) on different days in a variety of orders.
- Result: Preloading with vegetables and protein before carbohydrates cut post-meal glucose spikes by 37% and insulin surges by about half, compared to eating the food in the reverse order.
Resistant Starch (Cooling Rice/Potatoes):
- Study: Sonia, S., et al. (2015). Cooling white rice increases resistant starch (RS) resulting in lower postprandial glycemia.
- Source: College of Chemical Sciences, Sri Lanka.
- Subject/Method: In a study, rice was cooked and stored at 4°C for 24 hours followed by reheating.
- Finding: The cooling process raised levels of resistant starch substantially and reduced the glycemic response (or blood sugar elevations) when compared to freshly prepared rice.







