
by Milos Pokimica
There are easy and cost-effective strategies for optimizing the antioxidant value of our diet.
Milos Pokimica
Accepted ideology.
If we accept the standard line of accepted ideology that was pushed by USDA and decide that an antioxidant-rich diet is not of significant value to overall health because the body can only utilize 3000 to 5000 ORAC units a day and that the rest of it is just going to waste then we will also have to accept the officially recognized line that if you do consume more antioxidants in a whole food way they will do you no harm either.
In correlated articles, I have listed several diseases that do benefit from an increase in antioxidant consumption. So how can we increase our antioxidant score?
Well, we will have to analyze the total antioxidant content of more than 3100 foods in the already mentioned study to see how to optimize our diet. I am going to use some quotes from the study and then I will analyze some of the most potent and antioxidant-rich foods in the chart and then we can see what is the most optimal and easiest way to increase the antioxidant content of our diet.
General rules.
“A plant-based diet protects against chronic oxidative stress-related diseases… It is widely accepted that a plant-based diet with a high intake of fruits, vegetables, and other nutrient-rich plant foods may reduce the risk of oxidative stress-related diseases…
Spices, herbs, and supplements include the most antioxidant-rich products in our study, some exceptionally high.
Berries, fruits, nuts, chocolate, vegetables, and products thereof constitute common foods and beverages with high antioxidant values…
Plant-based foods introduce significantly more antioxidants into the human diet than non-plant foods…
The highest antioxidant values in the beverages category were found among the unprocessed tea leaves, tea powders, and coffee beans…
Other antioxidant-rich beverages are red wine, which has a smaller variation of antioxidant content (1.78 to 3.66 mmol/100 g), pomegranate juice, prepared green tea (0.57 to 2.62 mmol/100 g), grape juice, prune juice, and black tea (0.75 to 1.21 mmol/100 g). Beer, soft drinks, and ginger ale contain the least antioxidants of the beverages in our study, with drinking water completely devoid of antioxidants…“
The values that are given here are in mmol/100g and 1 mmol is 1000 micromole ORAC units. For example, 3.66 mmol/100 g is 3660 ORAC units.
“The dairy category included 86 products and the majority of these products were low in antioxidant content, in the range of 0.0 to 0.8 mmol/100 g.
Eggs are almost devoid of antioxidants with the highest antioxidant values found in egg yolk (0.16 mmol/100 g)…
When classifying the samples into the three main classes the difference in antioxidant content between plant- and animal-based foods become apparent. The results here uncover that the antioxidant content of foods varies several thousand-fold and that antioxidant-rich foods originate from the plant kingdom while meat, fish, and other foods from the animal kingdom are low in antioxidants. Comparing the mean value of the ‘Meat and meat products category with plant-based categories, fruits, nuts, chocolate, and berries have from 5 to 33 times higher mean antioxidant content than the mean of meat products. Diets comprised mainly of animal-based foods are thus low in antioxidant content while diets based mainly on a variety of plant-based foods are antioxidant-rich, due to the thousands of bioactive antioxidant phytochemicals found in plants which are conserved in many foods and beverages…
Nuts are a rich source of many important nutrients and some are also antioxidant-rich…
Most of the spices and herbs analyzed have particularly high antioxidant contents.
Although spices and herbs contribute little weight to the dinner plate, they may still be important contributors to our antioxidant intake, especially in dietary cultures where spices and herbs are used regularly. We interpret the elevated concentration of antioxidants observed in several dried herbs compared to fresh samples, as a normal consequence of the drying process leaving most of the antioxidants intact in the dried end product. This tendency is also seen in some fruits and their dried counterparts.
Thus, dried herbs and fruit are potentially excellent sources of antioxidants…
Herbal and traditional plant medicines emerged as many of the highest antioxidant-containing products in our study. We speculate that the high inherent antioxidant property of many plants is an important contributor to the herb’s medicinal qualities…
With their high content of phytochemicals such as flavonoids, tannins, stilbenoids, phenolic acids, and lignans berries and berry products are potentially excellent antioxidant sources… During the processing of berries to jams, total phenol content is reduced resulting in lower antioxidant values in processed berry products than in fresh berries…
Differences in unprocessed and processed plant food samples are also seen in our study where processed berry products like jam and syrup have approximately half the antioxidant capacity of fresh berries. On the other hand, processing may also enhance a food’s potential by increasing the number of antioxidants released from the food matrix, which otherwise would be less or not at all available for absorption. Processing of tomato is one such example where lycopene from heat-processed tomato sauce is more bioavailable than unprocessed tomato…
It is not likely that all antioxidant-rich foods are good sources and that all antioxidants provided in the diet are bioactive.
Bioavailability differs greatly from one phytochemical to another so the most antioxidant-rich foods in our diet are not necessarily those leading to the highest concentrations of active metabolites in target tissues…
Biochemically active phytochemicals found in plant-based foods also have many powerful biological properties which are not necessarily correlated with their antioxidant capacity, including acting as inducers of antioxidant defense mechanisms in vivo or as gene expression modulators. Thus, a food low in antioxidant content may have beneficial health effects due to other food components or phytochemicals executing bioactivity through other mechanisms.”
This is one of those studies that have the potential to revolutionize nutritional science but not only that. This study has practical and real implications for our day-to-day grocery decisions. The sad reality is that the vast majority of people don’t want to eat healthily and don’t want to learn and don’t want to do anything that they don’t need to do. Only when there is a chronic condition there is essentially an incentive for diet optimization for most people.
Because of this, I will try to give some easy-to-do and cost-effective ways to increase the antioxidant intake.
For most people, cheap and easy solutions will be the only ones that they will follow. If you want to go one step further then you can try to completely optimize your diet.
The first and easiest step.
The first and easiest step to do is to analyze the most antioxidant-rich food list and then just add them to your diet without changing anything. This is a practice or category I like to call supplemental antioxidants. This is the same way as taking a multivitamin once a day.
If you don’t want to give up meat, sugar, fat, alcohol, and smoking you can try at least to add a tablespoon of turmeric a day, a cup of cocoa, hibiscus tea, 1 gram of vitamin C, one capsule of astaxanthin and 40 grams of almonds or sunflower seeds to correct vitamin E deficiency.
Some foods are so antioxidant-rich that essentially we can take them as a supplement without even thinking about the rest of our diet and just this act will have an impact on our health.

The second step.
The second step is to add food items to the diet.
Most people don’t want to change their diet so on top of supplemental antioxidants they will just add juicing or some other type of health-promoting recipes after the meal. This would be an easy step that would not deprive you of tasty food but would just add additional nutrient density and ORAC value to the already existing diet. These two steps are acceptable for most people. You would need to spend some more time in the kitchen.

Oxidation.
When you learn the basics if you want you can always hire a professional nutritionist or learn more by yourself. Consider this article as a starting point. Also, all of the values listed in the table are just approximations, average values from a range of different values, and are not to be taken at face value. The ORAC values listed here are meant for us to have an insight into the potency of some food items.
For instance, the value for ground cloves has a range from 125,550 units measured in a sample obtained from the USA to a value of 465,320 for a sample obtained from Black Boy, Rieber og søn, Norway. The average would be around 290,000.
The ground cinnamon, for example, has values that range from 17,650 to 139,890.
Most of the values listed here, or in other sources are again in a practical sense exaggerated. The antioxidant value starts to drop immediately after the product is removed from the field. The longer it sits on a shelf the lower the antioxidant value will be. Also, if food is exposed to the air it will eventually go rancid. Nuts and seeds have a shell that protects them from oxygen but if the shell is broken then oxidation can accrue. That is the reason why it is never a good idea to buy already grounded nuts or seeds.
If you want flaxseed, sesame seed, or any other seed buy them whole and grind them yourself before consumption.
If you want to use fresh fruits or vegetables to make a smoothie if you don’t have a vacuum blender there is a good possibility that you will diminish most of the antioxidants in them. It is always a better choice to eat whole fruit than to blend them but some recipes demand the use of powerful blenders so keep this in mind or find a vacuum blender.
If you want to juice then use masticating juicers.
They use pressure and low RPMs to squeeze out the juice without blending it at high speed. This will help to lower the oxidation and the juice will have a better taste and color. The use of masticating juicers is an excellent way for everyone to increase the nutritional density of their diet because it is simulating the process of digestion by removing the fiber. When you remove the fiber then the rest of the juice can be digested with no problem in a very short period. If you don’t eat enough fiber then this can be a problem but if you do have adequate fiber intake then juicing high-quality, nutritious, low-calorie vegetables will infuse you with a lot of micronutrients without increasing the caloric intake during the day. Juicing high-quality low-calorie vegetables with a lot of antioxidants and minerals is an unnatural practice but in a positive way. In nature, we would not be able to consume a large number of high-fiber vegetables but if we remove the fiber and only drink the juice, there is no issue. Keep this in mind, every grinding or blending or any exposure to the air will reduce the antioxidant value of the produce. If you want cloves, buy them whole and grind them yourself before use.
The third step is the replacement of already existing food items.
This comes down to consumer decisions. For example, if you want to make a salad it would be a better choice to go with kale or spinach because of the lutein than to just eat cucumbers and lattice. You can eat them both but you can also add kale to the salad on top. If you feel you need to snack on something eat nuts before chips. If you want to eat something sweet then you can eat fruit or dry fruit that is even sweeter than fresh one. This is already a more proactive decision. In this stage, you have already started to implement some of the knowledge you have learned here. For this step, you would need to study and understand not just the ORAC value chart but also some of your nutritional deficiencies.

The fourth step is to think about micronutrient density.
In this step, you don’t eat impulsively anymore. You are incorporating nutritional strategies into your regular diet by design. When you decide to add some new recipe into your diet for health reasons after you already have all of the easy supplemental antioxidants and fresh juice then you can start to learn about the nutrient density of the food.
For example, when you look at the values in the table you can see that in most cases dried fruit will have more antioxidants than fresh produce and this is just an illusion. Because most of the fruit is water if we remove that water the rest of the fruit will become lighter and will have more fruit for the same 100 grams.
Micronutrient density of the dried fruit, vegetables, and spices can only be the same or worse.
Because the sugar is not evaporated the number of micronutrients per calorie remains the same as in the fresh produce. The only difference is that now it is more concentrated produce because the water has evaporated so we can have an illusion that somehow the dried rosemary is better than the fresh one. It is on gram-to gram bases but it is not on a calorie-to-calorie basis.
On an antioxidant value table, it is always the case that we can see that fresh herb or fruit has a lower ORAC value than dried ones. Also, the dried ones will always have a lower score than the extract or an extracted oil. That is why we can see for instance that grounded cloves have an antioxidant capacity of 290,000 and the extracted clove oil has more than one million. Or for instance, fresh green tea leaves will have a lower ORAC value than dried ones and the dried ones will have a lower value than the green tea extract in a pill.
There is a list of more than 100 different essential oils but I did not include them in the table. I included only the clove oil which is the most powerful of them all. I didn’t include the values because they are higher than any other product on the list. Essential oils will have taken more than 20 of the 25 most potent antioxidant-rich foods in existence because in an essence they are concentrated forms of phytochemicals.
Golden rule.
The golden rule goes like this.
Most powerful antioxidants are a concentrated form of natural antioxidant-rich herbs. On top of the list will be essential oils, herbal extracts, dried herbs, and powders. Then we will have dried fruit, and superfoods like antioxidant-rich fruit, raw nuts, and seeds and vegetables. Then there will be regular fruit, and regular vegetables, and then at the very end will be a whole list of animal products that have no antioxidant value and are pro-inflammatory.
Milos Pokimica
In essence, all animal products have negative ORAC values if we understand what in the reality they do in our bodies.
Cooking.
Also, you can see in the table that in most cases heat destroys some of the ORAC value.
Row beans and nuts are good examples. Raw pinto beans have a score of 8,033 and raw pistachio nuts of 7,675. Boiled pinto beans will have a score of only 904 and roasted pistachios of 1,380. It is the same story with green beans, green peas, and most of the other beans and seeds and nuts and most of the fruit and vegetables but again not all of them.
There are exceptions. For example, raw sweet potato will have an ORAC value of 902 but baked sweet potato will have a score of 2115. Raw red cabbage will have a score of 2496 but boiled red cabbage will have 3145. This is because of the bioavailability of the antioxidants. In some cases, heat destroys the cells and allows the phytochemicals to leech out. It is the same with tomatoes because of the lycopene. Also, some of the water content is evaporated creating a more concentrated source of antioxidants.
“How to cook the broccoli“ was always the question but in reality, the ORAC value increases by about 33% after boiling. Unlike most veggies, the types of antioxidants in broccoli are not greatly affected by the heat of cooking except for the sulforaphane. Sulforaphane is the reason you will want to eat cruciferous vegetables in the first place. It is a phytochemical that is unique in the cruciferous vegetable family and antioxidants you can find in other foods. It is derived nearly exclusively from cruciferous vegetables. You could eat as much as you want of other kinds of vegetables there will be no sulforaphane in there if you didn’t eat something cruciferous. It is a unique and very potent phytochemical especially for the phase 2 detoxification process.
If you buy frozen broccoli or kale the myrosinase enzyme is destroyed and there will be no sulforaphane creation and that is the reason why fresh kale fights cancer ten times as much as frozen. The freezing process is generally regarded as destructive to antioxidant capacity compared to fresh produce.
Calories.
When we look at these items we have to take into consideration not just the overall antioxidant potency, but how many calories will come with those antioxidants. The most important issue of them all is how much, in reality, will we be able to consume some food items. For instance, cabbage is not an antioxidant star but it has very few calories so when we consider the number of ORAC units per calorie it is a good source. But then again cabbage is hard to eat in large quantities and herbs and spices have that convenience that they can add a significant antioxidant power in a single pinch.
In the end, we will have to analyze individual foods and groups of foods to form some of the more specific recommendations outside of the golden rule.
Besides spices, essential oils, herbs, and supplements.
Besides spices, essential oils, herbs, and supplements what are some other good sources of antioxidants in general?
Some fruits are better than others, some vegetables are better than others.
If we look at the fruits the different types of berries, in general, are the richest source. Plums, apples, and cherries are also good.
Fruit depending on fructose content can have a high antioxidant value per calorie and also we can eat a lot of fruit in a single sitting, unlike spices or herbs. One pound of raw plums for example that are not from the Amazon rain forest like acai and are not as expensive will have 210 calories and around 30,000 units on an ORAC scale. An average male with a basal metabolic rate of around 2000 calories per day will get 275,000 units of antioxidants on an ORAC scale if he were to get all of his caloric needs met from plums only. If you were to eat a pound of boiled artichokes it will provide you with 42,000 ORAC units and 240 calories. One pound or 3 small red delicious apples will have around 19,000 ORAC units and 230 calories.
We don’t need expensive “exotic“ fruits and vegetables as a source of antioxidants.
If you want to eat them that is great and we should eat as much as different varieties as we can but if you don’t have money to waste on expensive produce regular apples will do. The real issue is that most people will eat low-antioxidant vegetables and fruits and most of the calories will come from fat, sugar, meat, and junk.
The small number of fruits and vegetables they will consume will likely be low on the antioxidant scale like bananas, cucumbers, iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, peas, and carrots, and then will try to basically supplement with a couple of servings of some really exotic fruits for their antioxidant value.
In the end, this approach will lead to very low antioxidant consumption. Instead of iceberg lettuce try to mix in some baby spinach and kale, some red beans and herbs, onions, garlic, and dill. Maybe some sprouts as well and some high nutrient-dense whole food dressing instead of oil (an example will be some nut butter or tahini or avocado and lemon juice mixed with some herbs).
Just one teaspoon of an herb like rosemary on top of your salad can double its antioxidant content. Not everything has to be kale either. There is no need to deprive ourselves because we have to eat healthy all the time and force ourselves into food anxiety. If you like bananas eat bananas, the issue is that the average diet of average meat, sugar, and junk-loving person is so bad and deprived of nutrients that some of the strategies I described here need to be implemented to help to balance the bad nutrient profile of the diet. If not, the result can be chronic diseases and bad health. Some animal products on rare occasions are fine but if you are not vegan and I mean you don’t eat whole food, plant-based diet the reality is going to be that you probably have low antioxidant intake, low fiber intake, low mineral intake, or unbalanced mineral profile of the diet with too little magnesium and iodine and selenium and so on. On top of that, you will likely have an excessive amount of dietary cholesterol and saturated fat and on top of that, you will likely be overexposed to environmental and dietary toxins. In this case, my advice is that if you cannot change your diet then you need to supplement.
Even if you are vegan antioxidant optimization and supplementation will benefit you but more in line with prolonged longevity, boosted immune system, prevention of brain shrinkage, increased endurance, strength, overall well-being, and health. In the non-vegan population supplementation with antioxidants will have longevity benefits too but the primary reason why they should do it is the prevention of chronic inflammatory conditions, cancer, cardiovascular, and other chronic diseases. Add more spice to a diet and just don’t overdo cinnamon and peppermint.
Take turmeric as a supplement and amla and cloves and other herbs and spices.
Take antioxidant-rich essential oils.
Drink cocoa and hibiscus and green tea.
Increase your intake of antioxidant-rich fruits and vegetables and add more variety to your diet.
And of course, my recommendation for everyone is to take supplemental astaxanthin. One 12mg astaxanthin pill will be equivalent to taking 72g of vitamin C. That is 72,000 mg and unlike vitamin C it will not be excreted out. Astaxanthin is fat-soluble and it will bioaccumulate in tissue offering lasting protection.
Conclusion:
- Antioxidant-rich diet is of significant value to overall health.
- The golden rule: Most powerful antioxidants are a concentrated form of natural antioxidant-rich herbs. On top of the list will be essential oils, herbal extracts, dried herbs, and powders. Then we will have dried fruit, and superfoods like antioxidant-rich fruit, raw nuts, and seeds and vegetables. Then there will be regular fruit, and regular vegetables, and then at the very end will be a whole list of animal products that have no antioxidant value and are actually pro-inflammatory.
- Spices, herbs, and supplements include the most antioxidant-rich products.
- Just one teaspoon of an herb like rosemary on top of your salad can double its antioxidant content.
- The highest antioxidant values in the beverages category were found among the unprocessed tea leaves, tea powders, and coffee beans.
- The dairy category included 86 products and the majority of these products were low in antioxidant content.
- Eggs are almost devoid of antioxidants.
- Herbal and traditional plant medicines emerged as many of the highest antioxidant-containing products.
- During the processing of berries to jams, pasteurizing commercial juices, and in coking in general total phenol content is reduced.
- If you don’t want to give up meat, sugar, fat, alcohol, and smoking you can try at least to add a tablespoon of turmeric a day, a cup of cocoa, hibiscus tea, 1 gram of vitamin C, one capsule of astaxanthin and 40 grams of almonds or sunflower seeds to correct vitamin E deficiency.
- Add juicing or some other type of health-promoting recipe after the meal.
- The antioxidant value starts to drop immediately after the product is removed from the field.
- Use a vacuum blender.
- If you want to juice then use masticating juicers.
- It all comes down to consumer decisions. Learn your ORAC values.
- Micronutrient density of the dried fruit, vegetables, and spices can only be the same or worse.
- Take into consideration not just the overall antioxidant potency, but how many calories will come with those antioxidants.
- Fruit depending on fructose content can have a high antioxidant value per calorie and also we can eat a lot of fruit in a single sitting, unlike spices or herbs.
- We don’t need expensive “exotic“ fruits and vegetables as a source of antioxidants.
ORAC Values
Passages selected from a book: “Go Vegan? Review of Science: Part 3” [Milos Pokimica]
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Milos Pokimica is a doctor of natural medicine, clinical nutritionist, medical health and nutrition writer, and nutritional science advisor. Author of the book series Go Vegan? Review of Science, he also operates the natural health website GoVeganWay.com

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