On some of the websites in this thread some foods are oddly placed. Celery and cauliflower are on opposite spectrums here:
Oxalate content of foods
But seem very similar here:
Oxalate Content of 750+ Foods
So just be careful about arbitrary categorizations - it may be deceiving. Some use "serving size" (an arbitrary thing), others use an actual weighted amount, and others don't even tell you how they're categorizing, what threshold they use for high/low/medium. Oxalate.org seems more clear/objective though, assuming it's accurate of course.
Anyways, great show guys! I think keto/paleo is still fully doable with this in mind, as there are plenty of low oxalate options that aren't simply meat. I'd think for many people it may be enough to just eliminate the worst offenders - it just depends on your general health etc.
Oxalate content of foods
But seem very similar here:
Oxalate Content of 750+ Foods
So just be careful about arbitrary categorizations - it may be deceiving. Some use "serving size" (an arbitrary thing), others use an actual weighted amount, and others don't even tell you how they're categorizing, what threshold they use for high/low/medium. Oxalate.org seems more clear/objective though, assuming it's accurate of course.
Anyways, great show guys! I think keto/paleo is still fully doable with this in mind, as there are plenty of low oxalate options that aren't simply meat. I'd think for many people it may be enough to just eliminate the worst offenders - it just depends on your general health etc.
. But I think I will also order magnesium from them. I stopped taking lugols some weeks ago due to stomach problems (but now I think that was causes by to much coffee on empty stomach, especially in the morning)