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October 24, 2017Clean Diet, Clean Living, Clean Pantry, Food News, Gut Health, Supermarket PicksBy Andrea Gourgy

We put a variety of store-bought fermented foods into the ring (technically, the lab) to see which one stacks up as the ultimate probiotic heavyweight.

The best fermented foods for your gut (clockwise from top): Kefir, kimchi, yogurt, miso, sauerkraut and kombucha.

We know fermented foods are good for us — they contain beneficial bacteria that help support your microbiome, the collection of bacteria, yeast, viruses and fungi that live in your gut and on your skin. Your microbiome impacts your health fundamentally, affecting digestion, immunity, weight and mental health.

But, with all the fermented foods on the market claiming they contain live bacterial cultures, it’s hard to know which are worth the spend and which are worth a pass. This month, we stepped out of the kitchen and into the lab to test a variety of store-bought fermented foods —and we’re showing you how they measure up.

We reached out to Brendan Chapman, PhD, a professor in the department of Food Science Technology at Centennial College in Toronto. We tested six categories of store-bought products – kefir, yogurt, miso, sauerkraut, kimchi and kombucha — and three different brands of each. Thanks to Dr. Chapman and his assistants Rajwinder Gurm and Ruchi Sharma who tirelessly measured samples, labeled petri dishes and counted colonies for us, we were able to rate them from the most potent probiotic to the weakest. Here’s how the foods stacked up:

Kefir: 27.7 billion CFU (Colony Forming Units) per 1 cup serving

Kimchi: 2.6 billion CFU per 1/2 cup serving

Yogurt: 3.6 billion CFU per 1 cup serving

Miso: 54.1 thousand CFU per 1 tbsp serving

Sauerkraut: 195.2 million CFU per 1/2 cup serving

Kombucha: 23.1 million CFU per 1 cup serving

The winner? Kefir, and by a long shot. It clocked in significantly higher than the rest with a whopping 27.7 billion CFU per 1 cup serving. Other heavyweights are yogurt and kimchi at 3.6 billion CFU per 1 cup serving and 2.6 billion CFU per ½ cup serving, respectively.

The Science Behind the Experiment

Dr. Chapman (left) shows Executive Editor Andrea Gourgy how the probiotic mixtures are homogenized during testing.

We tested 18 products, including three different brands of each kefir, yogurt, miso, sauerkraut, kimchi and kombucha. Dr. Chapman took 1 milliliter of each product and mixed it for 60 seconds with 9 milliliters of phosphate buffer saline. This homogenized the mixture to ensure that each sample was representative of the total.

The solution was then placed in petri dishes with tomato juice agar, a selective medium for Lactobacilli species — that’s technical speak for ensuring that only the bacteria we wanted to measure was isolated. The plates were then incubated anaerobically, or without oxygen, at 95°F for 48 hours. Then the number of colonies on each plate was counted. (Probiotics are measured in colony forming units, or CFU, which you may recognize from your probiotic supplement.)

We did the experiment twice, took two samples of each product in each experiment, and averaged the numbers for all products in a category. The caveat: We didn’t get results for all products, and we only measured one species, Lactobacilli (we did not account for diversity of strains). We also can’t speak to all brands of products beyond what we tested, as some brands may have more or less probiotics depending on their fermenting process. Having said that, according to Dr. Chapman, this is a pretty good measure of where each of these types of ferments stand.

Source: Clean Eating

About the author

Andrea Gourgy

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