Bobby Tables

I realize that not everyone will appreciate this cartoon as much as a well seasoned and tired programmer will, but I just had to post it. Reading this cartoon made my afternoon. I laughed so deeply I swear the sun came out afterwards.

BTW, whenever an img on my site is small, you can just click on it to see it as a larger copy 🙂

Absorbing Calcium

Chinese Flower Cabbage aka “Choy Sum” aka Brassica rapa var. The leafy green with the most calcium.

Many vegetables are actually better for preventing bone loss than cow’s milk. Preventing osteoporosis is about more than calcium intake. It is also about calcium absorption and the calcium in many vegetables is more absorbable than calcium from cow’s milk. A number of vegetables also have more calcium per calorie than dairy milk and vegetables have other nutrients for bone health that dairy milk does not.

Brenda Davis RD, is a coauthor of the American Dietetic Association’s Position Paper On Vegetarianism. She is also a vegan and a nutrition book author. Her revised edition of “Becoming Vegetarian” has an excellent chart of calcium from various foods and how much you can expect to absorb. Note. Davis’ chart listed the rates of absorption for vegetables per half cup. The rates may not be the same in different amounts. Highlights from page 103:

Cow’s Milk
1 cup – 300 mg – 32% absorbed, 96 mg net

Chinese Cabbage Flower Leaves, cooked
( aka “choy sum”, Brassica rapa var. parachinensis)
1 cup – 478 mg – 40% absorbed, 192 mg net

*Chinese* Mustard Greens, cooked
1 cup – 424 mg – 40% absorbed, 170 net

Turnip Greens, cooked
1 cup – 198 mg – 52% absorbed, 102 mg net

Bok Choy, cooked
1 cup – 158 mg – 53% absorbed, 84 mg net

Mustard Greens, cooked
1 cup – 128 mg – 58% absorbed, 74 mg net

Kale, cooked ( scotch kale has much more )
1 cup – 122 mg – 49% absorbed, 60 mg net

White Beans, cooked
1 cup – 226 mg – 22% absorbed, 50 mg net

Broccoli, cooked
1 cup – 70 mg – 61% absorbed, 42 mg net

Sesame seeds, without hulls
1 ounce – 37 mg – 21% absorbed, 8 mg net

Tofu, made with a calcium based coagulant
1 cup – 516 mg – 31% absorbed, 160 mg net

Warning: not all vegetables are a good sources of calcium.

Some vegetables have a lot of calcium, but also a lot of oxalic acid which binds up the calcium so people can’t absorb it. Vegetables that are healthy to eat, but that are poor calcium sources are spinach, rhubarb, swiss chard and beet greens.

Spinach, cooked
1 cup 230 mg – 5% absorbed, 12 mg net

Rhubarb, cooked
1 cup 348 mg – 8.5% absorbed, 30 mg net

Lettuce too. Lettuce is low in oxalic acid and has a lot of nutrition per calorie but lettuce is so low calorie the amount you would have to eat to get a significant amount of nutrition is impractical.

1 cup of shredded raw romaine lettuce will only provides 15 mg of calcium gross, without taking amount absorbed into consideration.

I couldn’t find any information about absorbability for collard greens. The USDA online nutrition database lists that 1 cup of cooked, chopped collard greens has 266 mgs of calcium.

Krause’s Food, Nutrition, & Diet Therapy textbook (2000) lists the following amount of oxalates per 100 g:

Spinach (boiled) 750 mg
Collards 74 mg
Kale 13 mg

In other words, without a figure for the absorbability of the calcium in collard greens and assuming that oxalates are the only impediment it looks like collard greens are still a decent calcium source.

I couldn’t find any information about the absorbability of calcium from butternut squash, but that squash does have 84 mg of calcium per 1 cooked cup.

Chinese Procrastination

I often joke about procrastination with my Chinese friend at work. As you would expect, a culture as old as China’s would have much to say about procrastination. Jiangyan very nicely translated these Chinese poems for me

Song of Tomorrow
Written by Qian, Fu (1461­1504 probably) at Ming dynasty

Tomorrow follows tomorrow, how many tomorrows one will have!
he keeps waiting day after day, and surely no achievement he can make.
If he keeps putting off till tomorrow, soon the spring is over and the fall is there, and he is getting old.
In the mornings, he watches the stream flows to the east, in the evenings, he sees the sun sets.
How many tomorrows are there in a hundred years? Please listen to my Song of Tomorrow!

Poem of Today
Written by WenJia (1501 1583) at Ming dynasty

Today follows today, how few todays one has!
If he doesn’t do today, when can it be done!
How many todays one will have for a hundred year’s of life, what a pity if there is no action today!
If you say just wait until tomorrow, you will have something else for tomorrow.
I’m writing the Poem of Today for you, please just working hard from today.

Ballad of Yesterday
Written by not known

Yesterday and yesterday, how nice was yesterday!
But yesterday was over, today you can only get annoyed.
People just know to regret yesterday, without realizing that today is passing by…
Rivers are flowing day by day, flowers are falling less and less.
To make achievement you need to start from today, not regret by tomorrow.