Tips for Getting Vitamin C
WebMD Feature
June 19, 2000 -- Reaching the new RDA (recommended
dietary allowance) for vitamin
C is easy if you incorporate a variety of fruits and vegetables into your
diet, says Felicia Busch, MPH, a registered dietitian in St. Paul, Minn. A diet that contains five servings of fruits and vegetables should put you at about 200 milligrams a day.
According to the new Institute of Medicine
recommendations, men need 90 milligrams of vitamin C a day, while women need 75
milligrams. If you're pregnant, try for 80 to 85 milligrams, and if you're
nursing, you'll need 115 to 120 milligrams. Smokers also need about 35 milligrams more because they deplete their stores of vitamin C faster.
Citrus fruits, berries, and peppers are particularly rich
sources of vitamin C, Busch says. Some specific food values are listed below. Busch doesn't recommend vitamin C supplements as an alternative or complement to fruits and vegetables. "A bad diet with supplements is still a bad diet, and you should really focus on eating a diet of nutritious foods first," she says.
Another thing to remember is that vitamin levels begin to diminish after food is harvested. The longer produce has been in storage or in transit, the less vitamin C it will contain. So choose fresh fruits and vegetables whenever possible. And if it comes down to a choice between out-of-season fresh produce and frozen, take frozen. Out-of-season produce often travels long distances to reach market and therefore loses more of its nutritional value.
How you prepare food is also important. To preserve as
much of the vitamin content as possible, either steam the food or microwave it
with as little water as possible, Bush says. Boiling is the worst thing you can do. It causes the greatest loss of vitamin content because the food remains at high temperatures for a long period of time, which either destroys the vitamins or allows them to escape into the water.
Here's the vitamin C content of some common foods,
provided by Mark Levine, MD, an endocrinologist at the National Institutes of
Health:
| Source (in milligrams) |
Amount of Vitamin C |
| 1/2 cup orange juice |
50 |
| 1/2 cup fortified grape juice |
120 |
| medium orange |
70 |
| medium kiwi fruit |
75 |
| 1 cup sliced strawberries |
95 |
| 1/4 medium cantaloupe |
60 |
| 1/2 cup cooked broccoli |
60 |
| 1/2 cup cooked Brussels sprouts 50 |
50 |
| medium baked potato |
25 |
| 1/2 cup raw tomato |
15 |
| baked sweet potato |
30 |
| 1/2 cup fresh, cooked snow peas 40 |
40 |
| 1/2 cup raw green pepper |
65 |
Mitchell Leslie is a
freelance science writer who lives in Belmont, Calif.
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Last Editorial Review: 1/30/2005 10:38:47 PM