Oxalates in food
For several months I have had kidney stone symptoms. I am waiting on a test to be authorized. In the meantime I have been researching low oxalate foods. All of my favorite foods appear to be loaded with oxalates: beets and beet greens, spinich, sweet potatoes, nuts, sesame seeds, garbonzo beans.....what is really confusing me is all the conflicting information. On some lists sunflower seeds are low others very high....I bought a bulk supply of mung beans and split peas because a list said the are low in oxalates, but now I am finding other lists that say they are high. Pumpkin also has conflicting results.....at this point I am afraid to eat anything!
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Thanks. I’m not on a restricted 35g/day diet. I need more than that as I’m a competitive athlete. Trying to find a good balance.
@randyr Am sending you positive vibes and luck wishes.
Thank you very much.
I’ve read conflicting info regarding oatmeal’s oxylate content. Is it high or ok?
@randyr Oatmeal is relatively high in oxalates. Vegetables like cabbage are low. Also, cooking certain foods leaches oxalates out into the cooking liquid so should be drained to get rid of some of the oxalates. Also, what I've learned is that in metabolizing oxalates, solubility is relevant. For instance, turmeric and cinnamon are equally high oxalate. But the oxalates in turmeric are about 90% soluble (so your body keeps more) whereas the oxalates in cinnamon are only 10% soluble so your body retains much less.
https://drjockers.com/low-oxalate-diet/
Here are some links discussing soluble and insoluble oxalates and low oxalate diets for kidney stones and other problems.
http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=george&dbid=48
https://drjockers.com/low-oxalate-diet/
https://drjockers.com/12-steps-prevent-kidney-stones/
Thanks so much. I read that coconut flour is a good low oxylate alternative to all purpose flour. Has that been your experience?
@randyr I've never used it. Coconut flour can replace up to 20% of wheat flour in most recipes, but requires the addition of the equivalent amount of liquid. It lends baked goods a rich texture and naturally sweet coconut-flavor so less sugar may be needed.
¼ C coconut flour has 58 mg P & 154 mg K & 5 Gm protein. 1/4 C regular wheat flour has 33.7 mg P, 33.5 mg K, 3.2 mg protein. I don't use a lot of flour and make a white sauce with a very small amount and use cornstarch & water as a thickener since it's lower in phosphorus & potassium. I make biscuits with white flour and yeast instead of baking soda to lower the sodium but believe me they're not as good as the real thing.
Thank you very much.