The Australian Vegan Magazine — May-June 2017

(Ben Green) #1
as 300 per cent? Onions and garlic can
increase availability of iron from grains and
legumes by 50 per cent, and sprouting your
legumes before you cook them significantly
improves iron availability. Hummus is a
classic example of an iron-rich dish full of
co-factors that enhance iron-absorption.
Iron-rich seeds have great versatility in the
kitchen and can be whizzed up with fruit in

of whole foods when whole foods are freely
available to the general public and can’t be
patented. Who is going to bother funding
that, aside from governments? And it’s a lot
easier to test a single nutrient than to study
the connections between multiple nutrients:
science just doesn’t lend itself well to the
study of holism because there are too
many variables to account for, and how can
you study something properly if you can’t
isolate it from its larger environment?
Research funders want to identify
a single ‘active’ ingredient that can be
isolated, patented, concentrated and sold
back to us with the story that this artificial
drug-like substance is somehow superior
to the synergistic magic of wholefoods. No
supplement could possibly replicate the
nutrient complexity of whole plant foods,
with diverse nutrients in perfect ratio with
one another, in a distinctly recognisable
form our human body has evolved along-
side of since the beginning of our time.
Supplements are vital, and they play an
important role in correcting deficiencies
and protecting those at risk of deficiencies,
but they most definitely cannot be thought
of as preferable to real food. And just as
iron supplements can have a corrosive
pro-oxidant effect on the body, so too can
supplemental vitamin C (ascorbic acid).

Enhancing iron absorption
As Dr Greger says in his best-selling
book How Not to Die, the amount of vitamin
C from a single orange can enhance iron
absorption “as much as three- to sixfold, so
those trying to boost their iron absorption
should reach for some fruit instead of a cup
of tea.” Vitamin C is found in most fruits
and vegetables. Some of the richer sources
are broccoli, cabbage, kale, parsley,
capsicum, black currants, guava, kiwifruit,
mango, orange, pineapple, rockmelon,
strawberry, berries, citrus fruit in general,
tomatoes, brussels sprouts, cauliflower,
snow peas, pawpaw, and melons.
Did you know that the citric acids in
citrus fruits also enhance iron absorption?
Or that carotenoids, such as the beta-
carotenes in yellow, red and orange foods,
can increase iron absorption by as much

of nutrients. To illustrate, you might be
thinking you could simply pop a vitamin
C pill with meals to enhance your iron
absorption, but this would be ignoring the
fact that synergism also applies to the
vitamin C in this lover’s tryst, not just the iron.
Have you heard of the book Whole?
The subtitle is Rethinking the Science of
Nutrition by T. Colin Campbell, PhD, with
Howard Jacobson, PhD. In Chapter 11,
titled Reductionist Supplementation,
Colin tells a story about Dr Liu, a research
colleague who was curious about exactly
what it was in apples that made them
healthy for us. Dr Liu and his team started
by focusing on the vitamin C content of
apples and its antioxidant effect, and they
discovered that the vitamin C-like activity
from 100mg of whole apple was an
astounding 263 times as potent as the
same amount of isolated chemical!
“Said another way, the specific chemical
we refer to as vitamin C accounts for much
less than 1 per cent of the vitamin C-like
activity in the apple – a minuscule amount.
The other 99-plus per cent of this activity
is due to other vitamin C-like chemicals in
the apple, the possible ability of vitamin C
to be much more effective in context of the
whole apple than it is when consumed in
an isolated form, or both...
“If we just take an isolated vitamin C
pill, we miss out on the cast of ‘supporting
characters’ that may give vitamin C its
potency. Even if we add many of those
characters into the pill too, which some
manufacturers have done with bioflavonoids,
we are still assuming that whatever is in
the apple and not the pill is somehow
unimportant... it is now clear that there are
hundreds, if not thousands of chemicals in
apples, each of which, in turn, may affect
thousands of reactions and metabolic
systems.”
In synergism, the supporting characters
for the nutritional star of any show are
often referred to as co-factors. Vitamin C
is a famous co-factor for iron, but there
are many, many more. Science has barely
scratched the surface when it comes to
understanding synergism. There isn’t much
point, after all, in researching the synergy

Dietary iron sources
Rich food sources of iron include
legumes, tofu, nuts, seeds, wholegrains
(esp. amaranth and quinoa), dried fruits
and dark green leafy vegetables. While
the nutrient levels in seaweeds are often
very high, our oceans are contaminated
with chemicals and heavy metals, so
seafoods probably shouldn’t be relied
upon as a primary source of nutrition.
The iron quantities in the foods listed
below are averages, as the nutrient
content in any food can vary dramatically
depending on variables such as the variety
grown and the conditions the food is
grown under, not to mention the effects
of processing, storage and transport.


  • 8g dried weight kombu............................22.1 mg

  • 60g dark chocolate (70-85% cacao)............7.1 mg

  • 1 cup cooked lentils.....................................7 mg

  • åDVQmSNUPGVNH

  • 8g dried weight dulse...............................6.4 mg

  • ¼ cup whole sesame seeds.......................5.3 mg

  • 1 cup amaranth.........................................5.2 mg

  • 1 cup cooked chickpeas................................5 mg

  • 1 cup of parsley............................................4 mg

  • ½ cup cooked spinach..............................3.3 mg

  • 1 cup of quinoa.........................................2.8 mg

  • 2 tbs tahini paste......................................2.7 mg

  • 2 tbs pumpkin seeds.................................2.5 mg

  • ½ cup of prunes........................................2.4 mg

  • ½ cup tempeh..........................................2.4 mg

  • 1 cup cooked pumpkin..............................2.4 mg

  • ½ cup black olives....................................2.3 mg

  • 1 cup oatmeal...........................................2.2 mg

  • 1 cup of kale.............................................1-2 mg

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  • 1 cup fresh chopped basil..........................1.4 mg

  • 1 cup cooked broccoli...................................1 mg

  • 1 avocado.....................................................1 mg

  • 2 tbs cashews..............................................1 mg

  • ¼ cup dried apricot, coconut or pears...........1 mg

  • 1 cup strawberries....................................0.6 mg


healthOLIHVW\OH




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