Lower Carb, Diabetes-Friendly Almond & Pecan Granola » Hangry Woman®

Granola doesn’t have to spike your blood sugar to be delicious. This almond and pecan granola is built with nuts, seeds, and just enough oats to create a crunchy, satisfying topping that supports steady energy and balanced mornings.

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Granola has a reputation. It shows up looking wholesome and earthy… and then quietly delivers 60+ grams of carbs in a single “serving” that nobody actually measures.

As a nutritionist and health coach living with diabetes, I love granola — but I love blood sugar stability more.

So I built this Almond & Pecan Granola to do both.

This version leans heavily on nuts and seeds for protein, fiber, and fat — which slows digestion and supports steadier glucose levels. It’s crunchy, spiced, and satisfying without being a maple syrup delivery system.

Let’s make it.

Why This Granola Works for Blood Sugar

Before we even get to the oven, here’s what I notice from a blood sugar lens:

The base is almonds, pecans, and pumpkin seeds, not just oats.

Oats are included, but they’re not the majority ingredient.

Sweetener is used strategically.

Fat and fiber are doing the metabolic heavy lifting.

This is the difference between “granola as a topping” and “granola as a glucose event.”

Almond & Pecan Granola

Serves: 10
Total Time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

Almonds, chopped

Pecans, chopped

Pumpkin seeds

Quick oats

Coconut chips

Ground cinnamon

Ground cardamom

Salt

Maple syrup

Almond butter

Coconut oil, melted

Let’s Talk Ingredients (Because They Matter)

Almonds & Pecans

These bring healthy fats, fiber, and plant protein. Fat slows gastric emptying — which means glucose enters your bloodstream more gradually.

Pumpkin Seeds

Underrated. They provide magnesium, which plays a role in insulin sensitivity. Some people with diabetes are low in magnesium without realizing it.

Oats

Yes, oats are a carbohydrate. But they contain beta-glucan, a soluble fiber that helps blunt post-meal glucose spikes. Oats also support overall heart health. The portion matters — and here, it’s balanced.

Cinnamon & Cardamom

Cinnamon has been studied for potential effects on fasting glucose levels, though results are mixed. I include it for flavor first, possible metabolic bonus second.

Maple Syrup

Used lightly. It helps bind and crisp, but the nuts are doing most of the structural work.

How to Eat This Without Spiking

Here’s where strategy comes in.

Instead of pouring a bowl of granola like cereal (which turns into “accidentally 2 cups”), try:

Granola works best as a texture enhancer, not the entire meal.

If you wear a CGM, this is a perfect experiment meal. Try it once with yogurt alone, and once with yogurt plus berries plus this granola. Watch the difference when protein and fiber are doing their job.

Data > fear.

Want to Lower the Carbs Even More?

You can:

Reduce oats to 60g and increase pumpkin seeds

Swap half the maple syrup for a non-nutritive sweetener

Add unsweetened shredded coconut for more bulk without carbs

Granola is flexible. Your blood sugar plan should be too.

Storage Tips

Because this recipe uses minimal sugar compared to commercial granola, it doesn’t have the same preservative load.

Store in an airtight container for up to 3 weeks. If it loses crunch, a quick 5-minute reheat in the oven restores it.

Lower Carb, Diabetes-Friendly Almond & Pecan Granola

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Description

This almond and pecan granola is a blood sugar–friendly homemade granola recipe made with nuts, seeds, oats, and warm spices for a crunchy, balanced breakfast or snack.

Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C).

In a medium bowl, combine almonds, pecans, pumpkin seeds, oats, coconut chips, cinnamon, cardamom, and salt.

In a small bowl, stir together maple syrup, almond butter, and melted coconut oil until smooth.

Pour the wet mixture over the dry ingredients and mix until evenly coated.

Spread evenly on a lined baking sheet.

Bake for about 20 minutes, stirring once halfway through, until golden brown.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely. It crisps as it cools.

Store in a glass jar or airtight container for up to 3 weeks.

Notes

Because this recipe uses minimal sugar compared to commercial granola, it doesn’t have the same preservative load. Store in an airtight container for up to 3 weeks.
If it loses crunch, a quick 5-minute reheat in the oven restores it.

Prep Time: 10 minutesCook Time: 20 minutesCategory: Breakfast, SnackMethod: Baked, BakingCuisine: American, Plant-Forward

Nutrition

Serving Size: 2 tablespoons
Calories: 84
Sugar: 1.4 g
Sodium: 27.2 mg
Fat: 6.2 g
Saturated Fat: 2 g
Carbohydrates: 5.5 g
Fiber: 1.3 g
Protein: 2.1 g
Cholesterol: 0 mg

Final Thoughts

Food is not the enemy. Poor formulation is.

When we adjust ratios — more protein, more fiber, less added sugar — we don’t lose joy. We gain stability. And stability builds confidence.

This granola gives you crunch, spice, and satisfaction without hijacking your glucose curve. That’s the kind of trade I’ll make every time.

If you’re tired of guessing how foods affect your blood sugar, start tracking patterns instead of stressing over perfection.

Inside Glucose Guide, you can log meals, monitor your glucose response, and actually see what works for your body — not someone else’s meal plan.

Use the Diabetes Food Journal to test recipes like this granola, compare portions, and build a breakfast routine that supports steady energy.

Download my app, Glucose Guide and start making data-backed food decisions with confidence. Your blood sugar patterns tell a story — let’s use them.

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