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News has emerged today that Paula Deen, that loveable rascal of the Food Network’s most heinously fat recipes, has type II diabetes. Not only that, but she’s reportedly had the condition for a ...
Deen, 64, star of Food Network's Paula's Best Dishes, built her career by making calorie-rich, indulgent recipes such as fried chicken, macaroni and cheese and rich desserts, the kind of foods ...
Last week, Paula Deen, the sweet-talking Southerner and Food Network star who measures a meal's worthiness in sticks of butter, revealed that she has been living with Type 2 diabetes for the last ...
As pitch person for Novo Nordisk, Deen is now contributing diabetes-friendly recipes to a website. She uses the company’s drug Victoza, a once-daily noninsulin injection.
Food Network personality shares her recipe for getting healthy and dropping weight after being diagnosed with the disease ByJosh GrossbergJun 27, 2012 8:31 PMTags Interviews Food Weight Loss Paula ...
There’s good news though. By removing these same foods from her recipes, Deen may be able to reduce the symptoms of type-2 diabetes — and could even potentially reverse the disease.
The timing of TV chef Paula Deen's public revelation she has diabetes -- coinciding with her endorsement of a diabetes drug, but coming three years after her diagnosis -- has prompted a debate ...
In 2013, she became the center of a national controversy after admitting to past use of racial slurs. The concerning and much ...
NEW YORK, N.Y. - Paula Deen, the Southern belle of butter and heavy cream, is making no apologies for waiting three years to disclose she has Type 2 diabetes while continuing to dish up deep-fried ...
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 ...
News that Paula Deen, the queen of greasy, sugar-loaded Southern cooking, may have type 2 diabetes was met with disdain across the Web on Friday. But reactions turned even more derisive when it ...