The Palm Beach Post
By Associated Press   |  Celeb Stalker  |  January 18, 2012

By LEANNE ITALIE

Paula Deen, the Southern belle of butter and heavy cream, is making no apologies for waiting three years to disclose she has diabetes while continuing to dish up deep-fried cheesecake and other high-calorie, high-fat recipes on TV.

She said she isn’t changing the comfort cooking that made her a star, though it isn’t clear how much of it she’ll continue to eat while she promotes health-conscious recipes along with a diabetes drug she’s endorsing for a Danish company.

“I’ve always said, ‘Practice moderation, y’all.’ I’ll probably say that a little louder now,” Deen said Tuesday after revealing her diagnosis on NBC’s “Today” show. “You can have diabetes and have a piece of cake. You cannot have diabetes and eat a whole cake.”

Health activists and one fellow chef called her a hypocrite for promoting an unhealthy diet along with a drug to treat its likely effects. Deen added her support of the Novo Nordisk company to a collection of lucrative endorsements that include Smithfield ham and Philadelphia Cream Cheese.

Deen, who will turn 65 on Thursday, said she kept her diagnosis private as she and her family figured out what to do, presumably about her health and a career built solidly on Southern cooking. Among her recipes: deep-fried cheesecake covered in chocolate and powdered sugar, and a quiche that calls for a pound of bacon.

“I really sat on this information for a few years because I said, ‘Oh, my gosh, what am I going to do about this? Is my life fixing to change? Am I no longer going to like my life?” she asked. “I had to have time to adjust and soak it all in and get up all the information that I could.”

While Deen, who lives in Savannah, Ga., has cut out the sweet tea she routinely drank straight through to bedtime and taken up treadmill walking, she plans few changes on the air.

Government doctors say that being overweight (as Deen is), over 45 (as Deen is) and inactive (as Deen was) increase the risk for developing Type 2 diabetes. Growth of the disease in the U.S. has been closely tied to escalating obesity rates. Roughly 23 million Americans are believed to have the most common Type 2 diabetes; patients’ bodies either do not produce enough insulin or do not use it efficiently, allowing excess sugar, or glucose, to accumulate in the blood.

Deen is the pitch person for Novo Nordisk’s new online program, Diabetes in a New Light, which offers tips on food preparation, stress management and working with doctors on treatment. She has contributed diabetes-friendly recipes to the website and takes the company’s drug Victoza, a once-daily noninsulin injection that had global sales of $734 million in the first nine months of 2011.

A recipe for Lady and Sons Lasagna, on her diabetes-conscious site, uses extra-lean ground beef and cans of unsalted tomato sauce and diced tomatoes, for a dish estimated at 260 calories a serving. Turn to Deen’s collection of recipes on The Food Network’s site and find Grandmother Paul’s fried chicken, with Crisco shortening for frying, or baked French Toast casserole, with two cups of half-and-half and a half-pound of butter. No calorie counts are estimated.

The Novo Nordisk site links to promotional materials for the drug Victoza. Company spokeswoman Ambre Morley and Deen declined to disclose how much she is being paid.

Deen said she had no help or advice to offer the public when she was first diagnosed, but feels she’s making a contribution now.

None of that matters much to outspoken chef Anthony Bourdain, who has never been a Deen fan. He told Eater.com of her diabetes announcement: “When your signature dish is hamburger in between a doughnut, and you’ve been cheerfully selling this stuff knowing all along that you’ve got Type 2 diabetes … it’s in bad taste if nothing else.”

In Yuba, Wis., Judd Dvorak watches Deen cook on TV all the time with his wife. He thinks Bourdain has the right idea. Dvorak said it’s wrong for Deen to accept money to become a paid spokeswoman for a diabetes drug after espousing a cooking style that helps lead to diabetes.

“It would be like someone who goes on TV and brags about how wonderful it is to smoke two packs of cigarettes a day and then when he or she gets lung cancer becomes a paid spokesperson for nicotine patches,” Dvorak said. “I feel it is in very poor taste and if she chose to become an unpaid spokesperson for the American Diabetes Association, that would be a better way for her to make a difference and help fight this horrible disease.”

Deen also smokes, but she considers her heavy-handed food only one piece of the diabetes puzzle, with genetics, lifestyle, stress, age and race. She said she would never advocate smoking and her diabetes is “well under control.”

While making changes in her personal life, she doesn’t think her TV shows — there are three — will look much different. She spends about 30 days a year taping, “so I’m not cooking and eating that way every day.”

That’s something the public doesn’t necessarily know. The food, Deen said, isn’t really to blame.

“I am who I am,” she said. “I think the South gets a bad rap sometimes, saying our food is very unhealthy, but frankly I don’t think that’s the case. I think it’s like any other food, whether it be Italian, French, Cajun. They all can be very high in calories and that’s where we have to practice portion control and moderation.”

Morley said the company didn’t know Deen had diabetes when it approached her about promoting the new health initiative.

“We really just wanted to ask her, ‘Hey, Paula, do you think we could challenge you to change up some of your recipes and make them diabetes-friendly,” Morley said. “And her reply was, ‘How did you guys know I had diabetes?’”

It was a surprise to the Food Network as well. Network officials found out only last week, said spokesman Jesse Derris.

“As part of the Food Network’s family, our only concern is for Paula’s health. We will continue to support her as she confronts this new challenge, taking her lead on what future episodes will offer her fans,” he said.

Some health experts question the delay between the time Deen was diagnosed with diabetes and her move three years later to promote a healthier way of cooking and living.

“A more responsible approach would have been that once she was diagnosed with diabetes to really emphasize to her viewers the importance of eating a healthy diet,” said Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

4 Responses to “Chef Paula Deen hid diabetes, pushed high-fat food”

  1. Mark Demma says:

    I see lots of articles about Ms Deen’s diagnosis that single out things like butter or bacon specifically and attribute them to her contracting type II diabetes. Now all the research I’ve read, and personal experience from testing blood sugar levels after meals, fat is the micronutrient that raises blood sugar levels THE LEAST. Protein will raise it somewhat when consumed over a certain point as it gets converted into glucose and of course carbohydrates will raise it the most. I don’t see anyone pointing to the bread the butter gets put on as the culprit. Perhaps part of the reason the rates of diabetes are going up is the sheer ignorance of what foods contribute to it, from the random internet commenter, diet reporters, all the way up to the ADA. My own personal experience is that eating a higher fat, moderate protein, low carb paleo diet I’ve been able to lower blood pressure, fix my insulin resistance so I’m no longer pre-diabetic, lost 120 pounds, had all my markers vastly improved and look and feel great. If I’d listened to the conventional wisdom and avoided steak, butter and bacon and instead opted for blood sugar spiking “healthy whole grains” (a slice of whole wheat bread will spike blood sugar more than a snickers bar) then I am very sure I’d be in bad shape right now. My advice from my own personal experience? Ignore the advice of the “professionals” (who get a big part of their funding from grain producing agribusiness) and at least give the low carb paleo gig a try. My doctor finally conceded “well, it goes against everything I’ve been taught, but I can’t argue with your numbers, which are as good as a 20 year olds, so keep doing what you are doing”. It’s a shame that there is so much monied interests in selling us food that will make us sick (grains, sugars, industrial seed oils) and keeping us sick that getting the advice that would reverse diabetes just gets ignored.

    • Deborah says:

      Well said Mark. As a diabetic (type 1 if that matters) I was amazed by how ill informed this article was. Fat eaten with carbs slows down the digestion of the carbs, which helps avoid spikes in blood sugar levels. To the author of the article – what has dietary fat got to do with diabetes? Diabetes is when insulin (needed to digest carbohydrates) is either not present or ineffective.

  2. Anna says:

    I urge Paula to get the filmmaker’s Specialized diabetes diet and do not take the medications

    The Anti Obesity drug makers and diabetes drug makers take in 10 billion$$$$ every year with no cure!!

    Food Chemicals are the cause of the diabetes and obesity crisis The FDA and Drug makers know this and are laughing to the Billionaire$$$ bank

    The food chemicals break the gut(insulin) and this is the cause of the diabetes and obesity crisis A filmmaker has been reversing diabetes and Obesity WITHOUT MEDICATIONS in now 10 countries and the drug makers do not promote the story

    just google SPIRIT HAPPY DIET

  3. Toxins says:

    I’m sad for Paula, but not all that surprised. Maybe she should look into a healthier diet to treat her diabetes instead of drugs? There’s lots of interesting information available at this noncommercial, science based site (nutritionfacts.org). To quote the good doctor: “It is too bad Paula Deen missed this opportunity” to tell her fans “that type 2 diabetes can be prevented, managed, treated, and even cured” (read more at http://nutritionfacts.org/blog/2012/01/18/paula-deen-diabetes-drug-spokesperson/)

Trackbacks/Pingbacks


Leave a Reply


We'd like your thoughts on this story. I appreciate your willingness to share them. At pbpulse.com, we want to avoid comments that are obscene, hateful, racist or otherwise inappropriate. If you post offensive comments, we will delete them as soon as we can. If you see such comments, please report them to us (video tutorial) by clicking on the date/time stamp of the comment and emailing that URL to this link.

Tim Burke, Publisher, The Palm Beach Post.


Click here to load this Caspio Online Database app.


Share Photos
Copyright 2012 The Palm Beach Post. All rights reserved. By using PalmBeachPost.com, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement. Please read it.
Contact PalmBeachPost.com | Privacy Policy
This website is ACAP-enabled