Say Bye to Milk – A Table of Calcium-Rich Substitutes!
In my last two blogs we learned that the old axiom “Milk, does a body good” simply doesn’t hold water (or milk?). The slogan is just that, a slogan; propagated heavily by the for-profit milk enterprise. It took advantage of some loose science, but was mostly a success in marketing, not public health.
When I was a kid, I basically lived off of milk—more specifically, 2% milk. Towards the end of high school, I did the unspeakable. I switched to non-fat. Yes, it tasted like water at first, but I got used to it and continued to enjoy milk in my breakfast cereal. For another decade I kept my non-fat milk/cereal routine, gravitating towards healthier cereals such as unsweetened Grape Nuts, whole wheat Cheerios, and corn flakes as I grew older (and wiser!). However, after taking a couple nutrition courses in grad school and reading a few books by leading nutritionist, I realized milk was an unnecessary part of my diet. It was time to kick the habit!
Around that time my girlfriend introduced me to almond milk. I decided to give it a go. It was a great substitute as I could hardly tell the difference! Yet California was deep in a drought, and almonds were a very water-intensive crop mostly sourced from the arid state. Did I need milk at all? Did I need cereal? A self-administered dietary survey from a couple months back had already showed I was eating too much grain and too little fruit. Perhaps this was the perfect opportunity for a positive dietary change—mixed fruit for breakfast! And so it went. Three years later, I haven’t looked back. I haven’t missed milk, and I haven’t missed cereal. And nor has my body.
See the table below for some great calcium-rich alternatives. A multi-vitamin or calcium supplement is another way to meet your daily calcium needs.
To see the calcium content of more foods, and compare them with dairy, visit Harvard’s The Nutrition Source website.
See the table below for some great calcium-rich alternatives. A multi-vitamin or calcium supplement is another way to meet your daily calcium needs.
| Food | Amount | Calcium (milligrams) |
| Collards, frozen, boiled | 1 cup | 357 |
| Orange Juice, Calcium-fortified | 1 cup | 350 |
| Oatmeal, instant | 2 packs | 326 |
| Milk, skim | 1 cup | 306 |
| Figs, dried | 10 medium | 269 |
| Tofu | 1/2 cup | 258 |
| Spinach, boiled | 1 cup | 244 |
| Canned salmon | 3 oz | 181 |
| Cheese, American | 1 oz | 162 |
| White Beans, boiled | 1 cup | 161 |
| Cornbread | 1 2-oz piece | 133 |
| Black turtle beans, boiled | 1 cup | 103 |
| Swiss chard, boiled | 1 cup | 102 |
| Iceberg lettuce | 1 head | 97 |
| Green peas, boiled | 1 cup | 94 |
| Broccoli, boiled | 1 cup | 94 |
| Soy milk | 1 cup | 93 |
| Oranges | 1 cup | 72 |
| Almonds | 1 oz (24 nuts) | 70 |
To see the calcium content of more foods, and compare them with dairy, visit Harvard’s The Nutrition Source website.
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Shahir Masri, Sc.D.
Environmental Health Scientist

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