Does eating tahini with bread help maintain stable blood pressure after meals in people with well-controlled type 2 diabetes?
What the Evidence Shows
What we've found so far suggests that eating tahini with bread might help maintain more stable blood pressure after meals in people with well-controlled type 2 diabetes [1]. The evidence we’ve reviewed leans in this direction, with 46.0 supporting claims and no studies or claims found that refute it [1].
Our analysis of the available research shows that when people with well-managed type 2 diabetes eat tahini along with bread, their blood pressure may stay steadier in the hours after the meal. This effect could be linked to the type of fats in tahini, which are mostly unsaturated, rather than the saturated fats found in some other common spreads or foods. Since heart health is especially important for people with diabetes, keeping blood pressure stable after eating may be a helpful part of long-term wellness .
We want to be clear: this is not a definitive conclusion. What we’re seeing is a consistent pattern across the claims we’ve analyzed so far, but we don’t yet have the full picture. Our current analysis is based on a single claim that aggregates support from 46.0 sources — but we haven’t reviewed the individual study designs, sample sizes, or methods behind them. That means we can’t say how strong or reliable those sources are. Also, no claims in our review contradicted this idea, but that doesn’t mean conflicting evidence doesn’t exist — only that we haven’t seen it yet.
We also don’t know how big the effect is, how long it lasts, or whether it leads to meaningful health improvements over time. There may be other factors — like overall diet, activity level, or medication use — that influence the results.
For now, our takeaway is simple: if you have well-controlled type 2 diabetes, adding tahini to your bread might be a heart-friendly choice that helps keep your blood pressure steadier after eating. It’s not a guarantee, and it’s just one piece of the puzzle — but it could be a small, practical step worth considering.