Git yer Potassium Up!

ercarta
ercarta Posts: 74 Member
edited April 2019 in Health and Weight Loss
MFPs, how do you get your recommended potassium daily? Only so many bananas a brother can eat. I've had varying degrees of success here, mostly not.

MyFitnessPal is recommending 3500mg daily. I average a third of that roughly. I also understand potassium offsets sodium to balance your electrolytes?

Hit me!

Eric
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Replies

  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    edited April 2019
    Potatoes, zucchini, and coffee
  • cathipa
    cathipa Posts: 2,991 Member
    Milk, berries, beans
  • SCoil123
    SCoil123 Posts: 2,111 Member
    I hate bananas personally but eat a lot of avocado, spinach salads, and potatoes which are all excellent sources of potassium
  • lx1x
    lx1x Posts: 38,330 Member
    Orange juice
  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,420 Member
    edited April 2019
    Any fruit, vegetable, dairy, bean/legume has potassium. You can also Google, "Potassium rich foods" for a definitive list.

    As was stated upthread, the database doesn't necessarily have the potassium entered. Most of the database entries are User submitted and it isn't a labeling requirement.

    I have vetted my foods. The foods I use on a regular basis I have checked the nutrition against the USDA database. I then entered the food myself and kept it private as one of MY FOODS. That way I have all the nutrition tracking entered the way I want it.
  • BattyKnitter
    BattyKnitter Posts: 503 Member
    Any fruit, vegetable, dairy, bean/legume has potassium. You can also Google, "Potassium rich foods" for a definitive list.

    As was stated upthread, the database doesn't necessarily have the potassium entered. Most of the database entries are User submitted and it isn't a labeling requirement.

    I have vetted my foods. The foods I use on a regular basis I have checked the nutrition against the USDA database. I then entered the food myself and kept it private as one of MY FOODS. That way I have all the nutrition tracking entered the way I want it.

    Can you use those foods you entered yourself and saved in my foods in the recipe builder? I use entries I've double checked but having to find them again every time I input a new recipe is a pain!
  • zeejane4
    zeejane4 Posts: 230 Member
    edited April 2019
    I log over on cronometer, which gives a more accurate breakdown of micros. Today I'm at 3530mg, which is 136% of the RDA of potassium, for my stats, (and I still have some extra calories to play with, so this number may go up). I can give you a breakdown of what I'm eating today, if you're interested. But, lots of veggies, dairy and then beef and chicken. No bananas :)

    eta: forgot to log the serving of pistachios I'm going to eat, that brought my potassium number up to 3840mg/148% RDA for my stats
  • TanyaHooton
    TanyaHooton Posts: 249 Member
    Potato foods (potatoes, fries, chips, etc.). Avocado, banana, nuts, coconut water. Non-fat greek yogurt like Chobani is chock full of it.

    Potassium is good for you, and most people eating a standard American diet do not get enough of it. Same with magnesium.
  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,420 Member
    Any fruit, vegetable, dairy, bean/legume has potassium. You can also Google, "Potassium rich foods" for a definitive list.

    As was stated upthread, the database doesn't necessarily have the potassium entered. Most of the database entries are User submitted and it isn't a labeling requirement.

    I have vetted my foods. The foods I use on a regular basis I have checked the nutrition against the USDA database. I then entered the food myself and kept it private as one of MY FOODS. That way I have all the nutrition tracking entered the way I want it.

    Can you use those foods you entered yourself and saved in my foods in the recipe builder? I use entries I've double checked but having to find them again every time I input a new recipe is a pain!

    Yes!
  • psychod787
    psychod787 Posts: 4,099 Member
    Sweet potato, spinach
  • Gisel2015
    Gisel2015 Posts: 4,187 Member
    Low sodium V8
  • RunsWithBees
    RunsWithBees Posts: 1,508 Member
    Coconut water!
  • jlynnm70
    jlynnm70 Posts: 460 Member
    Watermelon is a great source for Potassium.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,257 Member
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).
  • ercarta
    ercarta Posts: 74 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).

    Yeah booyyyy! Sounds like my kind of poison. 730mg p/ tbsp, hot damn! Thanks for sharing! 🤙🏼

    Eric
  • ercarta
    ercarta Posts: 74 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).

    Ok, so a quick look at what Amazon is peddling gets me half the mgs your brand has. Out with it @AnnPT77! 😜
  • MikePTY
    MikePTY Posts: 3,814 Member
    Despite becoming the poster child for potassium, there are a lot of other sources out there than just bananas, many of them higher in potassium.

    Potatoes (sweet or white), beans, avocado, cooked spinach, beets, squash, and tomato sauce are some good ones to have.
  • OooohToast
    OooohToast Posts: 257 Member
    Ooh beetroot is the bomb ! And can go really well with all sorts of food. Yum !
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,257 Member
    ercarta wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).

    Ok, so a quick look at what Amazon is peddling gets me half the mgs your brand has. Out with it @AnnPT77! 😜

    You're right: My bad.

    I have to admit, I trusted the MFP DB entry for the mgs, which is a mistake . . . never double-checked because I'd eat it anyway (I like a bit of sweetness in my oatmeal, which is plain oats, not an instant packet). You're right, USDA says 300mg. (https://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/foods/show/45012638).

    Wholesome brand is the best-tasting brand I've found, so far. Some just taste like burned sugar. For one tablespoon/20g, label says 8%DV for potassium (USDA 300mg), 10%DV calcium (100mg), 20%DV iron (3.6mg), 8%DV B6 (0.16mg), 10%DV Magnesium (0.15mg). To me, easily worth the 60 calories, overall.
  • pierinifitness
    pierinifitness Posts: 2,226 Member
    I've discovered boiled potatoes, refrigerated and eaten cold and naked the following day or later. There's a great food, for me, making me full and come at a low calorie count. Every time I eat them, I notice my potassium consumption recorded in MFP skyrockets. Therefore, they must be high in potassium.
  • ercarta
    ercarta Posts: 74 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    ercarta wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).

    Ok, so a quick look at what Amazon is peddling gets me half the mgs your brand has. Out with it @AnnPT77! 😜

    You're right: My bad.

    I have to admit, I trusted the MFP DB entry for the mgs, which is a mistake . . . never double-checked because I'd eat it anyway (I like a bit of sweetness in my oatmeal, which is plain oats, not an instant packet). You're right, USDA says 300mg. (https://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/foods/show/45012638).

    Wholesome brand is the best-tasting brand I've found, so far. Some just taste like burned sugar. For one tablespoon/20g, label says 8%DV for potassium (USDA 300mg), 10%DV calcium (100mg), 20%DV iron (3.6mg), 8%DV B6 (0.16mg), 10%DV Magnesium (0.15mg). To me, easily worth the 60 calories, overall.

    Ah, check it out. We both learned something today. Thanks for the feedback @AnnPT77. 😊👌🏼
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    ercarta wrote: »
    MFPs, how do you get your recommended potassium daily? Only so many bananas a brother can eat. I've had varying degrees of success here, mostly not.

    MyFitnessPal is recommending 3500mg daily. I average a third of that roughly. I also understand potassium offsets sodium to balance your electrolytes?

    Hit me!

    Eric

    Google high potassium foods...there are a lot of better sources than bananas. potatoes and sweet potatoes are bomb for potassium.

    Also, potassium isn't required on labels and since that is where most database entries are derived, that information would be missing.
  • ercarta
    ercarta Posts: 74 Member
    edited April 2019
    I've discovered boiled potatoes, refrigerated and eaten cold and naked the following day or later. There's a great food, for me, making me full and come at a low calorie count. Every time I eat them, I notice my potassium consumption recorded in MFP skyrockets. Therefore, they must be high in potassium.

    Potatoes seem to be high on everyone’s list. I’ve been avoiding them for years because they’re starchy and carb heavy. I may give them another look.
  • cathipa
    cathipa Posts: 2,991 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    Blackstrap molasses, which I enjoy in my oatmeal, has 730mg per tablespoon, in the brand I prefer (. . . but it's an Evil Added Sugar, so others will tell you to avoid it ;) ).

    Thanks for the reminder!
  • lemurcat2
    lemurcat2 Posts: 7,885 Member
    edited April 2019
    Potatoes, coffee, dairy, any fruits and veg and generally whole plant-based foods.

    I log at Cronometer which is more reliable for things like potassium (unless you are really careful at MFP) and find just getting in a good amount of veg a day tends to take care of it, but I really like veg.