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Nutrient Density: The Simple Way To Eat Better And Steady Your Blood Sugar

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Learn what Nutrient Density is, why it matters for blood sugar and type 2 diabetes, and easy ways to add more Nutrient Density to every meal. Simple tips, real talk, and doable swaps from Richie and Amber.

Slug: nutrient-density-diabetes-podcast

Episode Summary

Richie: Ever think, “I’m eating less… so why don’t I feel better?”
This episode is for you.

Amber: Today we talk about Nutrient Density. What it means. Why it helps your health and your blood sugar. And how to make it work in real life.

In this show, we explain:

What Is Nutrient Density?

Amber: Nutrient Density means how many good things you get in a food for the calories it has.
Those good things include:

Nutrient-dense foods give you a lot of nutrition with fewer calories. They are often:

Empty Calories vs. Nutrient Density

Some foods give you calories but not much else. That’s what we mean by “empty calories.”
Examples:

Amber: These spike blood sugar, then crash it. They can leave you hungry again fast.

Richie: The stat that shocked me—about 40% of the average American’s calories come from added sugar and fat. That’s a lot of energy with not much nutrition.

Why Nutrient Density Matters For Blood Sugar

Richie: Is there a difference between being hungry for calories and being hungry for nutrients?
Amber: Yes. You can eat a lot of calories and still be undernourished. Your body keeps asking for more.

The Donut vs. Beans Picture

Richie: Two donuts? Easy. Two cups of beans? That takes time. And I’d be full.

If You Eat Less, You Need More Nutrient Density

If you eat fewer calories (small appetite, GLP-1 meds, or after surgery), your body still needs the same vitamins, minerals, fiber, and protein. So every bite needs to count.

Signs you may be missing key nutrients:

Common Nutrient Gaps We See (and how to fill them)

  1. Magnesium
  1. Potassium
  1. Vitamin D
  1. Iron
  1. Vitamin B12
  1. Fiber

Same Calories. Different Results. (A simple look)

Two days at about 1,600 calories:

Day A (lower Nutrient Density):

Day B (higher Nutrient Density):

What changes with Day B?

Result: You feel fuller. Your energy is steadier. Your blood sugar curve is kinder.

“Eat Food That Rots” (What we mean)

Richie: Wait—you’re not saying eat rotten food, right?
Amber: No! Eat food that would go bad in a few days or a week. That means it’s real food.

Can Coke Zero help with Nutrient Density?

Richie: Coke Zero has no calories. Is that “better”?
Amber: It may save sugar and calories. But it adds no nutrients. Neutral at best. Focus on foods and drinks that add value (water, tea, smoothies with fruit and seeds, etc.).

Diet Culture vs. Real Life

Amber: Ask, “How can I add nutrients to this meal?” Not, “How little can I eat?”

Simple Ways To Add Nutrient Density Today

  1. Add, don’t subtract
  1. Use color on purpose
  1. Plate method for steady blood sugar
  1. Fresh‑frozen is your friend
  1. Low appetite? Make every bite count

Richie’s “Jar Trick” For Cravings

Richie: Picture a jar. Big rocks are your nutrient-dense foods. Sand is the treats.
Put the rocks in first. The sand can still fit, but not as much. You’re full of the good stuff first.

One Small Thing This Week (Pick One)

Pull Quotes

Timestamps

Your Takeaway

Richie: Make every bite count.
Amber: Lead with Nutrient Density. Add color, fiber, and protein. Fill up on the good stuff first.

If you’re trying to shift toward eating for more nourishment—not just numbers—you’re not alone. This is what we do at Empowered Diabetes. We make it practical, doable, and tailored to you.

Have questions? Email support@empowereddiabetes.com and we’ll answer them on a future show.

Note: This podcast is for education only and not medical advice. Talk with your healthcare provider about changes to supplements or medicines.

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The information in this podcast is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it does not replace a one-on-one relationship with your physician or qualified healthcare professional. Always talk with your doctor, pharmacist, or care team before starting, stopping, or changing any medication, supplement, exercise plan, or nutrition plan—especially if you have diabetes, prediabetes, heart, liver, or kidney conditions, or take prescription drugs like metformin or insulin.

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