Mind Your Food: Having a hard time getting your fill of fiber? Print E-mail
by Judith J. Wurtman, Ph.D.   
Sunday, 06 April 2008

Find out what it does for your body and some simple ways to sneak it into your diet. Do you eat enough fiber? Probably not. Most of the foods we tend to eat contain very little. Milk and milk products, such as cheese, yogurt and ice cream, contain none. Beef, chicken, fish, eggs and processed cold cuts contain none.

With the exception of baked beans, peas and corn, most vegetables contain relatively little. A salad containing one cup of lettuce, a very large cucumber and three tomatoes has only five grams of fiber. And we are supposed to eat 10 grams for every 1,000 calories we eat. That is a lot!

We need fiber to keep our digestive tract functioning well and, to some extent, to decrease fat and cholesterol absorption from our digesting food. Fiber is hard to obtain, especially in restaurant and/or highly processed foods, such as pizza, sandwiches and Chinese take-out. Before starting to munch on high-fiber toothpicks and napkins, try some of the high-fiber options listed below. You still may not make your daily quota, but at least you can increase your fiber intake from zero to something.

Unprocessed Bran ½ cup = 13.2 g. If you make muffins, use this.

All Bran, Bran Buds and 100 Bran are the best cereals for fiber; ½ cup has about 9 g.

Breads are low in fiber; even whole wheat has only 2 g per slice.

½ cup baked beans = 9 g

½ cup chickpeas = 6 g

½ cup canned peas or dried split peas = 5.4 g

½ cup spinach or broccoli = 5.7 g

½ cup corn (canned or on cob) = 4.5 g

1 cup carrots, cooked = 4.6 g

½ cup stewed prunes = 8.6 g

10 dried apricots = 8.4 g

½ cup raisins = 5.6 g

½ cup blackberries = 5.8 g

1 medium pear = 4.0 g

¼ cup almonds = 5.6 g (unfortunately these contain lots of fat)


Judith Wurtman PhD is a Research Scientist at MIT, the founder and director of Harvard University's TRIAD Weight Management Center and a co-founder of Back Bay Scientific. Dr. Wurtman received her Ph.D. in cell biology from MIT, took additional training as an NIH Postdoctoral Fellow in nutrition/obesity. She is currently co-director of ADARA Weight Management Services.   http://www.adaracenter.com 
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Comments (1)Add Comment
I love the branbuds
written by Carla MizFit Birnberg, April 27, 2008
I avoided them for YEARS because of how I anticipated they'd taste!

I do strive to get my fiber elsewhere for the most part but always have the buds around as a fall back.

Carla

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 06 April 2008 )
 
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