Welcome to the world of sugar free joy!
Low Carb Sugar-Free Sweets & Cakes
Artinci was born out of Aarti's and Sumit's (Artinci's founders) abiding love for great-tasting dessert, while helping them stay committed to their health goals as well. As a result, Artinci makes delicious desserts with zero sugar, that are science and evidence-backed.
Aarti and Sumit come from a family of three generations of diabetics. They were themselves diagnosed pre-diabetic in 2012, and right there began a lifelong quest of a healthy, active lifestyle, including healthy swaps in food
Sugar free Sweets & Cakes
Aarti Laxman (Founder)
Artinci is founded by Aarti Laxman, a certified Metabolic coach in the Low-Carb Nutrition & Metabolic Health domain from dLife.in, India’s only legally tenable course in this subject—recognized by the NSDC (under the Ministry of Skill Development & Entrepreneurship, Govt. of India). It’s also internationally accredited by the CPD Standards Office UK, with a global record of 144 CPD hours—the highest for any course of its kind. The accreditation is both nationally valid and globally recognised in over 50+ countries..
Festive Gifting in Artinci
Let customers speak for us
All about Sugar and sugar-free
It is a New Year and you resolved to cut back on sugar. But its also nearly the end of month 1 of the new year and the thousands of temptations around you make this new found resolve a challenge already. Right? Sounds familiar? Most people fail to cut back on sugar because they focus on the outcome - losing weight or lowering an A1c number or being beach body ready for the summer - rather than their identity. In the framework of behavior change, true transformation isn’t about what you do; it’s about who you become. Every time you choose water over a soda, you are casting a vote for a new identity: a person who prioritizes metabolic stability. To build this identity, you don't need a radical overhaul. You need small, practical habits that work with your biology instead of against it. 1. Understand the Evolutionary Mismatch The first step in building a new identity is understanding the "why." Your brain is hardwired to crave sweetness because, for our ancestors, it was a rare signal of safety and calorie density. Specifically, fructose acts as a biological "fat switch," an ancient signal telling your body that "winter is coming". In the modern world, this signal is active 24/7, 365 days a year. We are living in an evolutionary environmental mismatch, where our outdated biological machinery is being hammered by a permanent summer of high-fructose corn syrup. It goes by many names - Invert sugar, Corn Syrup, Liquid Glucose, and is found in popular biscuits, noodles, ketch-up and several other foods. When you realize that sugar is essentially "information" telling your body to store fat and raise blood pressure, it becomes easier to distance yourself from it. 2. Design Your Environment for Metabolic Peace The environment is the invisible hand that shapes human behavior. If "bags and boxes with barcodes" fill your pantry, you will eventually eat them. Make it Invisible: The most effective strategy is to remove the "Big Four" offenders - bread and cereals, potatoes, chips and namkeens, biscuits, from your immediate environment. These can be metabolically equivalent to several tens of teaspoons of table sugar. The Hard Line on Liquids: Your new identity is someone who does not drink sugar. Liquid sugar, including fruit juice and soda, hits the liver with massive velocity and volume, leading directly to fatty liver and insulin resistance. The Munchies Trap: Many people struggle with evening cravings because they keep "addictive" items like cereal, biscuits or namkeens in the house. If you cannot moderate it, do not bring it into your home. Practice Habit-Stacking: Tell yourself, “15 minutes before a meal, I will drink Apple Cider Vinegar.” or I will walk for 15 minutes after lunch, every day”. Or “Everyday at 4 p.m. Chai Time, I will eat roasted nuts, so that I can skip the biscuits or namkeens”. 3. Mastering the "Lead Domino": Change Your Breakfast The simplest habit to move the needle on your health is to change your breakfast tomorrow. Most modern breakfasts are actually hyperglycemic bombs in disguise - starchy (even the savoury ones like idli, dosa, poha) or sugary meals (even that “healthy” granola or muesli) that spike insulin and lock you into a sugar-burning mode for the rest of the day. The Habit: Choose a meal focused on protein and healthy fats. The Result: By keeping insulin low in the morning, you improve insulin sensitivity and allow your body to access its own fat reserves for fuel, which naturally makes your appetite and hunger very easy to manage later in the day. 4. Use "Exercise Snacks" to Blunt the Spike You don't need to spend hours in the gym to mitigate the damage of a high-sugar meal. One of the most effective habits is the 15-minute post-meal walk. When you move your muscles after eating, they act as a "glucose sink," pulling sugar out of your blood without requiring a massive insulin spike. This small habit can blunt a glucose excursion by half, reducing the systemic inflammation and protein glycation that leads to "sugar sag" and arterial damage. 5. Recalibrate Your "Sweetness Thermostat" Building a healthy identity requires a reset of your palate. If a raspberry tastes tart to you, it is a sign that your "sugar calibration" is off. The Berry Habit: Swap processed treats for berries (blueberries, raspberries, strawberries). They contain fiber that slows fructose absorption and act as a "shield" for your liver. The Dark Chocolate Test: Try a piece of 70% or darker chocolate. As your metabolism heals, you will find that things you once thought were "bitter" now taste deeply satisfyingly sweet. Artinci’s Mithai and Cakes as a bridge to your new identity: At Artinci, we make zero sugar sweets, cakes and cookies that can help you address that sweet tooth safely, while keeping your sugar spikes either non-existent (our Almond Cake and Cookies do that!) or significantly lower than their sugary counterparts (our Mithai collection) The Bottom Line You aren't "restricting" yourself; you are liberating yourself from a biological hijack. By using tools like apple cider vinegar before starchy meals to blunt spikes, or going for a walk after an indulgence, you are taking the "adult" role in the room of your own physiology. Don't worry about being perfect. Focus on being metabolically consistent. Change your breakfast, walk after lunch, and stop drinking sugar. Small wins lead to a new identity.
Meal timing and exercise schedules to prevent glucose surges
https://youtu.be/sxBmITOwQ54 Meal timing synchronized with exercise starting 30 minutes after major meals optimally prevents glucose surges by matching muscle uptake to peak postprandial glucose influx. Light aerobic activity for 20-60 minutes blunts spikes effectively, with minimal hypoglycemia risk. This approach fits Indian routines around breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Optimal Daily Schedule Breakfast (7-8 AM): Eat balanced low-GI meal (millets, eggs, veggies); exercise 30 min later with 30-min brisk walk. Lunch (12-1 PM): Post-carb meal like dal-rice, follow with 20-30 min light cycling or stairs at 30-45 min mark. Dinner (7-8 PM): Lighter fare (salad, paneer); 30-min yoga or walk starting 30 min after to curb overnight surges. Key Principles Space meals 4-5 hours apart to avoid overlapping surges; exercise mid-postprandial (30-90 min after) when glucose peaks around 60-90 min. Light-moderate intensity (50-60% HRmax: 220-age) prioritizes meal-derived glucose over liver output. Add resistance 2-3x/week for muscle gains aiding long-term control. Sample Weekly Plan Day Breakfast Exercise (30 min post) Lunch (30-45 min post) Dinner (30 min post) Mon Brisk walk Chair yoga Seated marches Tue Yoga asanas Stairs/light cycle Gentle twists Wed Resistance (squats) + walk Walk Yoga Thu Walk Yoga Cycle Fri Yoga Resistance + walk Marches Sat Family walk Stairs Twists Sun Rest or light yoga Light walk Early bed routine Indian Context Tips Counter rice/roti surges with post-meal family walks, common in urban Bengaluru. Hydrate well, monitor via glucometer, adjust for meds. Evening exercise aids dawn phenomenon prevention. https://www.medstown.com/10-minute-post-meal-exercise-to-lower-blood-sugar-naturally/ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4814694/ https://logifoodcoach.com/blog/post-meal-exercise-how-timing-impacts-blood-sugar/
Best low-impact exercises for people with high blood sugar
Low-impact exercises effectively lower high blood sugar by enhancing muscle glucose uptake and insulin sensitivity without joint stress, ideal for diabetes management in Indian lifestyles. Walking, swimming, and yoga top the list for accessibility in Bengaluru's urban setting. Start slow, monitor glucose, and aim for 30 minutes post-meal. Top Exercises Walking briskly for 20-30 minutes burns glucose directly, reducing spikes by up to 30% when done after meals. Chair yoga poses like leg lifts and seated twists suit seniors or office workers, improving circulation gently. Swimming or water aerobics provides resistance without weight-bearing strain, boosting metabolism for sustained sugar control. Stationary cycling at moderate pace targets legs for efficient uptake, perfect for home setups. Routine Comparison Exercise Duration Key Benefit Suitability Brisk Walking 30 min Spike reduction All levels, outdoors/indoors Chair Yoga 20 min Flexibility, no equipment Seniors, neuropathy Swimming 25 min Full-body, joint-friendly Pools available Seated Cycling 30 min Leg-focused glucose burn Home/office Practical Tips Combine with low-GI Indian foods like millets to amplify effects, avoiding highs from rice-heavy meals. Do 3-5 days weekly, consulting doctors for insulin users to prevent lows. Track progress for motivation in your blog content. https://diatribe.org/exercise/4-exercises-lower-blood-sugar https://www.diabetescarecommunity.ca/diet-and-fitness-articles/physical-activity-articles/low-impact-exercise-for-diabetes/ https://www.goodrx.com/conditions/diabetes/best-exercise-for-diabetes-blood-sugar-management-weight-loss
How to design a 30-minute post-meal workout to reduce sugar spikes
A 30-minute post-meal workout starting 30 minutes after eating effectively blunts blood sugar spikes by directing meal-derived glucose to muscles while insulin levels remain elevated. Light to moderate aerobic activities work best, minimizing hypoglycemia risk and suiting Indian urban lifestyles like Bengaluru's. Monitor glucose before and after, especially if on insulin. Workout Design Principles Begin exactly 30 minutes post-meal to align with rising glucose peaks from carb-rich Indian foods like rice or roti. Keep intensity light-moderate (50-60% max heart rate: 220 minus age, targeting 100-120 bpm for most adults) for steady glucose uptake without counterregulatory hormone spikes. Total 30 minutes suffices, blending aerobic moves for efficiency. Step-by-Step Routine Warm-up (5 min): March in place or slow walk to ease digestion.Main (20 min): Alternate brisk walking/stair climbing (10 min), bodyweight squats and lunges (5 min, 10-15 reps/set), arm circles and torso twists (5 min).Cool-down (5 min): Gentle yoga like Vajrasana or deep breathing for sustained uptake. Exercise Duration Reps/Speed Benefits Brisk Walk/Stairs 10 min Moderate pace Primary glucose sink, 30-50% spike reduction Squats/Lunges 5 min 10-15 reps x 2 sets Builds muscle for ongoing sugar processing Torso Twists/Arm Circles 5 min Continuous flow Boosts circulation, aids digestion Indian Lifestyle Tips Pair with low-GI meals like dal-chawal or millet roti to amplify effects, ideal for post-lunch deskside routines. Do indoors if hot; family walks enhance adherence. Track via glucometer for personalization, avoiding late evenings to prevent lows. https://infinitycarehospital.com/managing-diabetes-with-diet-and-exercise-tailored-tips-for-the-indian-lifestyle/ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4814694/ https://www.medstown.com/10-minute-post-meal-exercise-to-lower-blood-sugar-naturally/





