Isabelle Foster’s Best Diets for Managing Type 2 Diabetes

After her father corrected his prediabetes in six months without medication, Isabelle Foster set out to investigate diets supported by research for Type 2 diabetes control. Her research reveals three meal patterns that, in terms of blood sugar regulation, surpass others; each fits cultural tastes and way of life.

Mediterranean Diet

The American Diabetes Association ranks this plant-forward method #1, stressing olive oil, seafood, and whole grains. Isabelle references a 2024 research where members observed HbA1c reductions on par with various drugs. It’s the secret. Its anti- inflammatory lipids raise insulin sensitivity. She advises walnuts and flaxseeds as omega-3 substitutes for fish if one hates it.

Low-Carb (Not No-Carb) Approach

Focussing on non-starchy vegetables and proteins and limiting carbohydrates to 50–100g daily produced 58% remission rates in a historic 2023 study. Isabelle advises avoiding excessive ketogenic diets and instead teaches clients to “spend” carb limits on high-fiber foods like berries and lentils that slow down glucose surges.

Time-Restricted Eating

Eating within a 10-hour window—that is, 8 am to 6 pm—reduced fasting glucose by 11% according to a 2025 Johns Hopkins research without dietary adjustments. Isabelle couples this with her “plate hack”: One half should be filled with vegetables, one-quarter protein, one-quarter slow-digesting carbohydrates like quinoa or sweet potato.

Personalisation is fundamental to all strategies. While a Japanese-American patient wanted a seafood-rich low-carb diet, Isabelle’s Puerto Rican client flourished on a modified Mediterranean diet included plantains and beans.

Her golden rule is Test, don’t guess. By use of continuous glucose monitors—now $25/month without insurance—one can find specific trigger foods. These diets become effective instruments for regaining health when combined with 10-minute post-meal walks, found to lower blood sugar rises by 30%.