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Meeting your needs
Enjoying a variety of foods from the core food groups is the key to healthy eating. Always start the day with a nutritious breakfast: breads and cereals for energy, dairy products for calcium and protein, fruits for vitamins and minerals and a drink to hydrate your body.
Keep your fluid intake high by drinking plenty of water and meet your calcium needs by eating 3-4 calcium-rich foods like milk, cheese and yogurt every day.
To guard against the risk of low iron stores, eat a variety of foods rich in iron. The iron in red meat, poultry and fish is absorbed much more easily than the iron in plant-based foods like legumes, vegetables and grains. You can help to increase your absorption of iron from the food you eat by adding a Vitamin C rich food or drink to your meals.
To help build up your reserves of magnesium, iron, folic acid and vitamin C, aim to eat a variety of foods from the examples below.
Magnesium There is magnesium in:
Dried fruit (apricots, dates, figs), nuts (peanuts, walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds), wheat bran (unprocessed and processed), soy beans, tofu, cocoa powder and chocolate.
Iron You will find iron in foods:
Of animal origin: meat (e.g. beef, lamb, chicken, pork, kangaroo), offal (e.g. liver, kidney), fish and shellfish (e.g. oysters, mussels).
Of vegetable origin: legumes (e.g. chick peas, lentils, baked beans), bran flakes, wheat flake breakfast biscuits, wholegrain bread, eggs, nuts (pistachios, walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds, peanuts) spinach and bok choy.
Folic acid Excellent sources of folic acid (a B group vitamin) include wheat flake breakfast biscuits, corn flakes, bran flakes, asparagus, brussel sprouts, broccoli and spreads made from yeast extract. Very good sources of folic acid include green beans, green peas, leek, parsnip, cabbage, beetroot, spinach, capsicum, cauliflower, chickpeas, peanuts, oranges, orange juice, oats and wholegrain bread. Other good sources include cos lettuce, avocado, carrots, hazelnuts, cashews, walnuts, almonds, wheat germ, bananas and canned salmon. As folic acid is destroyed by heat, eat these foods raw or try cooking them for short periods of time only.
Vitamin C You will find Vitamin C in many fruits (oranges, grapefruit, lemons, kiwis, blackcurrants, strawberries, papaya) as well as in certain vegetables (parsley, capsicum, cauliflower, brussel sprouts, red cabbage, cabbage, spinach and watercress). Vitamin C is sensitive to cooking and therefore tends to be lower in cooked foods. |