need more iron - any ideas without increasing too many calories ?
Saab_2015
Posts: 277 Member
Need to get iron levels up ... Already have multi vits for a, c and d. Is more drugs the answer or do you have food ideas that are not fatty ?
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Replies
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Spinach for sure. I sautee 3 cups of it as a side to my breakfast almost every day. Very low cal and almost all of my DV of iron.0
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but how does it taste ? hope its not like having cod liver oil0
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Foods rich in iron include:
- Red meat
- Pork
- Poultry
- Seafood
- Beans
- Dark green leafy vegetables, such as spinach
- Dried fruit, such as raisins and apricots
- Iron-fortified cereals, breads and pastas
- Peas
Google search...0 -
You've never had spinach?! It's great raw as a salad base, but tastes like what you cook it in when you heat it. You can saute it with some garlic and olive oil, and add a little parmesan cheese to make an awesome side dish for just about anything. I pulled myself out of moderate anemia by upping my daily spinach intake and adding in two servings of red meat each week.0
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will give it a go thanks0
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legrandhiver wrote: »Spinach for sure. I sautee 3 cups of it as a side to my breakfast almost every day. Very low cal and almost all of my DV of iron.
3 cups of spinach only has 12% of the recommended daily iron. (1 oz of dark chocolate has the same amount of iron) People toss up leafy greens out as good sources of iron, but they are not. Also, the Iron in spinach is non-heme iron, which is absorbed at a lower rate than animal (heme) iron.
If you like clams, oysters, and mussels, they are very high in iron.
Fortified cereals are high in iron (shredded wheat has 100% of your iron in 1 bowl)
I like to throw out Dark Chocolate: It has more iron per ounce than beef. But people only tend to eat it an ounce at a time.
Google is your friend.
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Here's an off the cuff suggestion you probably won't hear many people suggest. Cocoa wheats has a ton of iron in it. You have to of course consider it's cereal, and that might not be your cup of tea, and it's also not as good as iron that comes from meat sources. However, for me, I don't eat red meat and I'm always way under what I should have in iron, it works better than nothing!0
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I thought I was low on iron but I've found some of the foods I logged only had calories carbs fat and sodium information so it just wasn't counted. make sure that when you log the options you choose include all of the micronutrient info as well0
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LolBroScience wrote: »Foods rich in iron include:
- Red meat
- Pork
- Poultry
- Seafood
- Beans
- Dark green leafy vegetables, such as spinach
- Dried fruit, such as raisins and apricots
- Iron-fortified cereals, breads and pastas
- Peas
Google search...
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legrandhiver wrote: »Spinach for sure. I sautee 3 cups of it as a side to my breakfast almost every day. Very low cal and almost all of my DV of iron.
3 cups of spinach only has 12% of the recommended daily iron. (1 oz of dark chocolate has the same amount of iron) People toss up leafy greens out as good sources of iron, but they are not. Also, the Iron in spinach is non-heme iron, which is absorbed at a lower rate than animal (heme) iron.
Actually, this is the nutritional value on the container:
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size 1 cup (85 g)
Per Serving % Daily Value*
Calories 15
Calories from Fat 0
Total Fat 0g 0%
Saturated Fat 0g 0%
Polyunsaturated Fat 0g
Monounsaturated Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 40mg 3%
Potassium 0mg 0%
Carbohydrates 2g 1%
Dietary Fiber 2g 8%
Sugars 1g
Protein 2g
Vitamin A 170% · Vitamin C 80%
Calcium 10% · Iron 35%
So you can see how I, with 3 cups, on an 1850cal/day diet, get most of my iron from it. I don't use it purely for iron, though. Meat is always best, but he was asking for low cal/fat.
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Cashews,pumpkin seeds, pumpkin seed butter(if u can handle a green butter)0
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One tablespoon of Hershey's special dark cocoa powder has 10 calories and has 10% of the DV of iron. I mix two tablespoons in my greek yogurt and I'm already at 20%. If you mix it into a cup of quick oats, you're at 30%. I add a little honey or some kind of liquid sweetener most of the time, but I really love the taste of cocoa, so I don't really find it necessary. And it's a delicious and nutritious to work some chocolate in your diet
You've been given plenty of other great options, but I just wanted to share that!0 -
Trade some chicken in for some extra lean beef. They, for the most part, have the same amount of calories and protein per oz. I usually get the butcher to grind a really lean cut and make yummy stuff from that, usually involving veggies and beans.0
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OMG I love the cocoa idea!
Do be careful that you are truly deficient in iron. Has a doctor told you that you are low on iron?
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/13/a-host-of-ills-when-irons-out-of-balance/
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