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Got Digestive Problems? Take It Easy on the Veggies.

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Reviewed by Tracey Long, MPH, RDN

digestive problems veggies
If you have digestive problems, veggies high in insoluble fiber—like spinach—can make them worse. iStock/Edalin

Previously, I wrote an article called “FODMAPS: Could Common Foods Be Harming Your Digestive Health?” I described how certain classes of foods, known as FODMAPs, are poorly digested in certain people and can lead to gas, bloating, pain and changes in stool frequency and consistency. Studies have shown that conditions like Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) are associated with FODMAP intolerance, and that a low-FODMAP diet offers relief in a substantial percentage of people with IBS. (1) I also have information on what would make up a diverticulitis diet menu if you’ve suffered from an attack.

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Today I’ve got another tip for those of you with digestive issues, including IBS, constipation, diarrhea and acid reflux: eat fewer vegetables.

Yep, that’s right. Fewer vegetables.

Find out how following mainstream advice to eat six to eight servings of vegetables a day could hurt your gut.

Vegetables, Insoluble Fiber, and Soluble Fiber

Vegetables (as well as some fruits) are often high in insoluble fiber. While soluble fiber can be soothing for the gut, consuming large amounts of insoluble fiber when your gut is inflamed is a little bit like rubbing a wire brush against an open wound. (2, 3, 4) Ouch.

Vegetables that are high in insoluble fiber include:

  • Greens (spinach, lettuce, kale, mesclun, collards, arugula, watercress, etc.)
  • Whole peas, snow peas, snap peas, pea pods
  • Green beans
  • Kernel corn
  • Bell peppers
  • Eggplant
  • Celery
  • Onions, shallots, leeks, scallions, garlic
  • Cabbage, bok choy, Brussels sprouts
  • Broccoli
  • Cauliflower

The vegetables that are high in soluble fiber, but lower in insoluble fiber (and thus tend to be safer for those with gut issues) include:

  • Carrots
  • Winter squash
  • Summer squash (especially peeled)
  • Starchy tubers (yams, sweet potatoes, potatoes)
  • Turnips
  • Rutabagas
  • Parsnips
  • Beets
  • Plantains
  • Taro
  • Yuca

Another helpful tip is to reduce the variety of vegetables you eat at any given meal. Instead of stir-fries with six different veggies, have a single steamed or roasted vegetable as a side dish. This works better for most people with gut issues.

But Won’t I Become Deficient in Nutrients If I Don’t Eat Tons of Veggies?

First of all, I’m not suggesting that you don’t eat these foods at all if you have digestive problems. I’m simply suggesting that you limit them. There are also steps you can take to make these foods more digestible and less likely to cause problems. They include:

  1. Never eat insoluble fiber foods on an empty stomach. Always eat them with other foods that contain soluble fiber.
  2. Remove the stems and peels (i.e. from broccoli, cauliflower, and winter greens) from veggies (and fruits) high in insoluble fiber.
  3. Dice, mash, chop, grate or blend high-insoluble fiber foods to make them easier to break down.
  4. Insoluble fiber foods are best eaten well-cooked: (5) Steamed thoroughly, boiled in soup, braised, etc; avoid consuming them in stir-fries and if you do eat them raw, prepare them as described in #3 above.

Second, although fruits and veggies are high in certain nutrients, animal products like meat, organ meat, fish, eggs, and dairy are as high and sometimes higher in those nutrients. For example, the chart below compares the micronutrient profile of beef liver and beef with blueberries and kale, two plant foods often referred to as being particularly nutrient-dense:

chart comparing nutrient content of liver, beef, kale & blueberries

It’s also worth pointing out that most traditional cultures only ate a few vegetables and fruits that were available seasonally. They couldn’t walk into Whole Foods and buy every vegetable on the planet at every time of year.

I have nothing against vegetables. In fact, I like them quite a bit and I do think they’re beneficial.

But the advice to eat six to eight servings a day is not based on solid scientific evidence and may cause unnecessary distress in people with gut problems.

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Fermented Vegetables: A Better Alternative?

Fermented vegetables like sauerkraut, kim chi, sauerruben, and cortido are excellent alternatives for people with gut issues. First, the fermentation process “pre-digests” the vegetables and makes them easier to absorb. Second, fermented veggies contain probiotic microorganisms that help heal the gut.

Although sauerkraut and kim chi contain cabbage, which is high in insoluble fiber (and a FODMAP to boot), I’ve found that many patients with gut problems can tolerate it quite well. FODMAPs are sugars and sugar alcohols, and fermentation breaks down sugars. This is probably why fermented FODMAPs are better tolerated than non-fermented FODMAPs.

If you’re new to fermented vegetables, you have two options:

  1. Make them yourself. Check out this page for a great primer. It’s really quite easy, and cheap.
  2. You can buy them at a health food store. Make sure that it says “raw” on the jar, and they’re in the refrigerated section. The sauerkraut you can buy in the condiments section has been pasteurized and won’t have the same beneficial effect.
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546 Comments

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  1. This may be TMI, but I HAVE noticed that I’m way less gassy when I eat fewer vegetables. Now I don’t feel so bad about not having them every other hour of the day, the way it sometimes feels like you’re *supposed* to…

  2. Great article Chris! I found a lot of the key points of high vegetable consumption being correlated with gut irritation to match my own experience.

    I’ve been eating a strict paleo diet for a few months now, mostly on the cyclic ketogenic side, and I recently had been having extreme stomach pains after certain meals to the point I had to lay down. Naturally this left me completely dumbfounded as I do not eat any of the typical gut irritants; grains, dairy, and legumes.

    My most recent stomach flare up came when this after noon when I ate a tuna salad consisting with a lot of arugula and spinach. Within 30 minutes of eating, I could barely walk and my mental state had rapidly declined.

    Interestingly, after about two hours my symptoms; cramps and bloating start to diminish. I’ve tried to duplicate the response to figure out what was causing this response, but could never get any consistent flare ups. Now after your reading your article, I can directly correlate my recent increase in vegetable consumption, directly to when I started having these crippling stomach pains!

    Going to play around with limiting my vegetable intake for a while and then reintroduce them in mass to gauge my response. Thanks again for all the amazing work you do and providing your knowledge to the world.

  3. I’ve found it helpful to stay away from FODMAPs and the veggies high in insoluble fiber that you listed.

    Question about beta-glucuronidase: While I follow a fairly clean diet, because of ‘IBS issues’ I have to take many supplements (iron, methyl-protect, B5, iodine, NAC, probiotics, CLO). My beta-glucuronidase is extremely out of the target range. While I dread taking another supplement, I’d like your opinion, would you recommend taking Calcium-d-Glucarate to lower it? Also if one has a history of breast or colon cancer, would you recommend supplementing with it? How does beta-glucuronidase affect liver function? Any link to improving gut health if you lower it?

    • Hi Angela,
      As Chris states on his “Contact” page, he can’t give personalized advice, even about food and supplements, due to insurance liability issues. At best, he could say something like, “I had a patient with IBS issues whose beta-glucuronidase was out of range, and I told that patient…”, but even that’s a gray area.

  4. Yes, and yes.
    there are trade-offs you can do. Cutting out onions to allow occasional garlic (which you need less of).
    I like chinese preserved cabbage. This is not refrigerated (just salted) and is very mulchy and delicious as a condiment.
    Health shop sauerkraut is too hard and not really fermented. I doubt it is meant to be refrigerated so much.

  5. Perfect timing. I just got back from visiting the doctor because I’ve had strange BMs for about 2 months. I’ve been eating primally for about a year and was doing great and then all of a sudden–big change. Anyway, I’m looking forward to taking your advice, because I eat tons and tons of vegetables, especially the ones you listed as having a lot of insoluble fiber. I’ve had breast cancer and so, of course, have gone crazy on the vegetable wagon. Love your information and look forward to other people’s comments on this.

  6. This has been known in Ayurveda now for thousands of years….the “roughness” that gives digestive problems of eating certain raw fruit and vegetables is called putting ones Vata out of balance. The symptoms in this case are, but not limited to, bloating and gas. The good thing about looking at your diet and routines in terms of the Doshas of Vata, Pitta and Kapha is that these symptoms ( as in the case of this article ) are but the first stages of disease. Of course nothing is going to happen from a few episodes of gas and bloating…but over a prolonged period of time…those symptoms will develop into other symptoms if not counteracted with changes to diet or addressing other root causes of ones environment and routine that one lives. Which is why western medical science is still so much in its infancy when it normally only addresses the much later stages of diseases which because of their prolonged neglect at their recognized state are much harder to treat and deal with.

    Also for some individuals their Vata would not become out of balance given the same raw portions of fruit and veggies compared to another; some people do not experience gas or bloating. In fact some peoples constitutions that are very low in Vata but say high in Kapha…benefit from favoring such fruits and vegetables eaten raw.

    On another note some people would at one time of the year yet not at another time of the year; cooked at one, raw at another.

    Hopefully someday, people as a whole will learn to understand their bodies much better than we do; and a very strong background in science education is not required for this to be.

  7. Thank you for this. I’ve been diagnosed with gluten, lactose, and fructose intolerance and was doing fine on a very restricted GF/FODMAPS diet until last year, when I started to notice that fiber seemed to be setting me off – even in foods like spinach that I’d been eating regularly for years with no problems. Curiously, cooked carrots and pumpkin don’t seem to bother me – even though they do contain fructose and thus should be problematic due to fructose intolerance. Now I’m starting to question the FI diagnosis in the first place.

    Any chance of a high-insoluble vs. high-soluable-fiber fruits post as well??

    • Probably not… just Google “fruits insoluble fiber” and you’ll find lots of lists to work from. In general berries and then the peels/skins of fruits are high in insoluble fiber, and banana, melons, the flesh of peaches, apples & pears are higher in soluble fiber.

      • Thanks Chris. Looking at a few soluble vs. insoluble fiber in fruits lists, I’m seeing another interesting pattern: the fruits that are often cited as being tolerated in small amounts by people with fructose malabsorption are high in insoluble fiber (blueberries, strawberries) – further explaining why I can’t even eat small amounts of them. Yet I can tolerate a couple blackberries from time to time – and apparently those are high in soluble fiber. Hmmmm. I sense some experimentation in my future!

  8. Tyler: read Dr Davis book Wheat Belly… Todays wheat is what he calls a chronic poision!

  9. Thank you for such a great article! I’ve had chronic constipation my entire life. Since switching to Primal and FODMAP I’ve seen a little bit of improvement. I’m starting to think that my problem is with fiber in general. It seems that I can only tolerate fiber in small amounts, even soluble fiber, like a few slices of fried plantain. A few weeks ago I ate a few servings of boiled yams and tannier and got a lot of pain in the lower abdomen. I’ll keep experimenting.

    • Angeline- what have you found works for you?
      Sounds simular to me. I love produce but reading this makes me think it may be the last thing the gut can handle? I hope you found out what’s safe and beneficial for the constipation.

      • Well I actually found out I had a polyp on my gallbladder. I had surgery a few weeks ago and had it out. Now the constant pain I was feeling on the left side of my torso is gone, but I have to be careful with the amount of fat (and the quality) I consume in one meal to avoid another type of discomfort/pain. Unfortunately, I havent seen improvement in bm, although everybody was telling me I was going to get the runs… I’m consuming digestive enzymes and looking for a good probiotic supplement to see wether that helps with digestion.

    • I second that. Fiber Menace put me on the right path, but i found myself dependent on the author’s Hydro-C supplement. Patsy Catsos’ IBS-Free At Last was the book that finally helped me to narrow down the biggest culprits for my gut irritation. Now I am no longer dependent on a supplement to help me go.

  10. This is interesting because I tend to have more frequent bowl movements when I eat a lot of veggies and I notice that my acne flares up also. Could the digestive issues with veggies cause acne?

    • Yes. Check out my podcast a while back on the gut-brain-skin axis. I will also be speaking on this topic at the Wise Traditions conference in November.

  11. Great read! Funny thing though I do SO much better with insoluable. I eat mostly lettuces, but not big hardy ones, they don’t work, celery, artichoke, carrot, onion and tons of steamed broccoli . I can’t digest any starch of any kind. Either it’s the stomach or I get extremely tired. I don’t know what that’s all about. I do Paleo with some Blood Type foods, the ones that actually work. I only eat a cherry or two at a time. LOL. I do about 7% carbs from above veg, 25% lean clean protein and the rest fats. I limit saturated. I eat olive oil and soaked and dehydrated nuts as well. That’s about it. Sometimes I think this is too limited to be healthy. I also agree with too much fat is hard to digest, especially saturated. I just sits there. Also, fermented veggies are a definate no go. Why would that be? It seems I am very limited in fiber. Asparagus bothers me bad along with big leafy greens. Nightshades and dairy are out as well. Good thing I love salads and protein!

  12. I’m very glad to see some numbers on what I had already suspected was true for a long, long time!

    I would love to know, though, where those numbers came from, and if you have any thoughts and/or data on whether naturally pasture-raised meats would be even more nutrient-dense than the beef shown above.

    Thanks!

    • They’re readily available on sites like NutritionData.com, and in USDA reports, etc.

  13. Hi! I’ve been on Paleo for over 3 months now and it works miracles, there’s jut one thing I had some tests done last week and my creatinine is a bit too high. I’m worried about my kidneys. Could that be too much of meat consumption?

  14. I’d like to see a comparison between the nutrients in veggies and those in a non-organ meat, since most people don’t eat organ meats on a regular basis. I have to say that I love your take on diet…no gimmicks, no rigid rules, just reason and science! I should mention that I’m probably one of the few vegetarians who are a fan of your site…I’ve been over twenty years without meat, but now have come to believe it’s an integral part of a healthy diet. I haven’t returned to eating meat, as I now have a huge psychological barrier to eating it, but that’s my personal issue–you keep on doing what you’re doing–the truth has no agenda! : )

    • In the graphic above, the micronutrient content of beef is listed, along with liver, kale and blueberries. You’ll see that red meat is higher in most micronutrients than kale and blueberries, with some exceptions.

      I eat vegetables myself and think they are a healthy and important part of the diet; my purpose here was simply to point out that certain types of veggies eaten in certain ways are more likely to cause gut issues.

      Thanks for your support! I was a vegetarian (and even macrobiotic vegan) myself for some time. I have respect for that as a choice, it just didn’t work for me and there are some serious limitations/challenges to those approaches.

      • I have read a lot of information on your site and Solving Leaky Gut’s site and still not sure how to start. I can do pretty good for two days and then I go back to what I used to do. I cannot seem to get past it. Lots of brain issues along with gut issues.

  15. Thank you! I changed to a low-FODMAP after seeing your earlier post, and it made a big difference. My gut seems to work better with *some* vegetable fiber, though, and it is harder now to find non-FODMAP, non-nightshade veggies containing the right kind of fiber. I see, though, that some of my favorite root vegetables are on the “good” list here, and I will certainly give them another try. I was already thinking of doing that, and your latest post is just what I needed.

  16. I limit the number of veggies. Have been doing this for the past year. Also no longer consuming dairy or wheat and my guy issues are resolved! I’m a much happier person!

    • I’m guessing you meant “gut” issues not “guy” issues. That could be a whole other blog.

  17. Chris,

    I want to know why we have low digestive acids as we grow older and not just in older people it seems as today there are more and more younger people with low stomach acidity.
    What is the actual cause of this funtionally? Carbs to seem to be a problem for low stomach acidity. But in the first place………..what is the actual cause?