Broccoli and prawn saute is a quick meal built around seafood and non-starchy vegetables. It can be light, but it still needs a planned side if you want a full dinner.
Quick summary
Prawns provide protein with little carbohydrate. Sauces, rice, noodles, bread, and sweet marinades are the parts that often change the glucose effect.
Key takeaways
- Broccoli adds volume and fiber.
- Prawns provide protein.
- Sauces can add sodium or sugar.
- Rice, noodles, or bread should be counted if served.
Ingredients
- Prawns or shrimp, peeled and deveined.
- Broccoli florets.
- Garlic and ginger.
- Olive oil or another cooking oil.
- Low-sodium soy sauce or lemon juice.
- Black pepper.
- Optional chili flakes.
- Optional measured brown rice, noodles, or beans.
How to make it
- Cook broccoli until bright and tender-crisp.
- Saute garlic and ginger briefly.
- Add prawns and cook until opaque and cooked through.
- Add lemon juice or a small amount of low-sodium soy sauce.
- Serve with vegetables and any counted side.
Diabetes-friendly serving notes
Use lower-sodium sauce when possible.
Avoid sweet sauces unless counted.
Count rice, noodles, bread, or other starch served with it.
Cook seafood thoroughly and keep it refrigerated before cooking.
Practical takeaway
This is a fast dinner that stays practical when the sauce and side dish are planned.
Safety note
This article is not a substitute for medical care. Avoid shellfish if allergic. If you are pregnant, immunocompromised, have kidney disease, or need sodium restriction, ask for seafood and sauce guidance.
What to ask your care team
- Which sauce fits my sodium goal?
- What side should I count with this meal?
- Are prawns or shellfish safe for me?
Related reading
Source summary
- Diabetes Plate Method, American Diabetes Association. Patient nutrition guidance. Accessed June 5, 2026. Source
- Diabetes Meal Planning, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patient nutrition guidance. Accessed June 5, 2026. Source
- Healthy Living With Diabetes, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Patient guidance. Accessed June 5, 2026. Source
- Advice About Eating Fish, U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Food safety guidance. Accessed June 5, 2026. Source