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Foods that Contain Probiotics and Prebiotics

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Updated:  
2016-03-26 17:56:21
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Probiotics For Dummies
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Many foods contain probiotics (the good bacteria that help your body maintain health) and prebiotics (fiber that good bacteria eat but that isn’t digestible by humans). However, it’s difficult to get enough probiotics strictly through food. You need to take a probiotic supplement to get enough probiotics in your diet to maintain good health, especially if you’re treating a particular illness (such as antibiotic-associated diarrhea).

Fermented foods — which used to be a larger part of the human diet because fermentation was a great way of preserving food — contain probiotics. You’ll see quite a few fermented foods on the upcoming list. Fermentation is the process of adding yeast to a food to change its structure. Primarily, sugars and starches are broken down during fermentation.

One thing to keep in mind: It’s the live bacteria in the food you eat that make it full of healthy probiotics. Since heat destroys the bacteria, you need to make sure that your yogurt, for example, says live or active cultures on the label. Some yogurts are pasteurized, which kills the bacteria. Those yogurts with live cultures add them back in after the pasteurization process.

Probiotic-rich foods include the following:

  • Kefir

  • Yogurt (with live cultures)

  • Kimchi (a spicy fermented cabbage common in the Korean diet)

  • Dark chocolate (a good, high-quality chocolate)

  • Tempeh

  • Microalgae

  • Miso

  • Pickles

  • Natto (a fermented soybean)

  • Some soft cheeses (such as Gouda) contain Lactobacilli bacteria

  • Sourdough bread may also contain Lactobacilli

  • Fruits such as bananas and tomatoes

  • Vegetables like artichokes, green beans, leeks

  • Whole-grain breads

  • Honey

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Dr. Shekhar K. Challa is president of Kansas Medical Clinic. Board Certified in Gastroenterology, he is an award-winning author and co-creator of the first probiotic video game (MicrowarriorsVideoGame.com).

Find out more about Dr. Challa at DrChalla.com.

Eamonn Quigley is Professor of Medicine and Human Physiology, University College Cork, Cork, IrelandHe has formerly been Professor of Medicine and Physiology and Chief of gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Nebraska Medical Centre (UNMC). There he developed there a clinical research centre for the study of gastrointestinal motility and pursued parallel studies in a variety of in vitro and in vivo animal models.In 1998, Prof. Quigley on returning to Cork as Professor of Medicine and Human Physiology he was the first Head of the Medical School from 2000-7. He is a principal investigator in the Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre (APC), funded by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) in 2003 and again in 2009 where his interests are in host-microbiota interactions in gastrointestinal disorders.Prof. Quigley is Vice President of the American College of Gastroenterology and a past Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of Gastroenterology. He has published over 500 original articles, reviews, editorials, book chapters; authored or co-authored six books and monographs. He has received a variety of honours and awards from medical and gastroenterological societies and universities throughout the world.