Vitamins are essential
nutrients that your body needs in small amounts to work properly. There
are two types of vitamins: fat-soluble and water-soluble.
Fat-soluble
vitamins
Fat-soluble vitamins are found mainly in fatty foods such as animal fats
(including butter and lard), vegetable oils, dairy foods, liver and oily
fish.
Your body needs
these vitamins every day to work properly. However, you don't need
to eat foods containing them every day.
This is because,
if your body doesn't need these vitamins immediately, it stores them
in your liver and fatty tissues for future use. This means the stores
can build up so they are there when you need them. But, if you have
much more than you need, fat-soluble vitamins can be harmful.
These are all fat-soluble
vitamins:
· vitamin
A
· vitamin
D
· vitamin
E
· vitamin
K
Water-soluble
vitamins
Water-soluble vitamins are not stored in the body, so you need to have
them more frequently.
If you have more
than you need, your body gets rid of the extra vitamins when you
urinate. Because the body doesn't store water-soluble vitamins, generally
these vitamins aren't harmful.
Water-soluble vitamins
are found in fruit, vegetables and grains. But unlike fat-soluble
vitamins, they can be destroyed by heat or by being exposed to the
air. They can also be lost in the water used for cooking.
This means that
by cooking food, especially boiling, we lose lots of these vitamins
from the food we eat. The best way to keep as much of the water-soluble
vitamins as possible is to steam or grill, rather than boil.
These are all
water-soluble vitamins:
· vitamin
B6
· vitamin
B12
· vitamin
C
· biotin
· folic
acid
· niacin
· pantothenic
acid
· riboflavin
· thiamin
What
are minerals?
Minerals are essential
nutrients that your body needs in small amounts to work properly.
We need them in the form they are found in food.
Minerals can be
found in varying amounts in a variety of foods such as meat, cereals
(including cereal products such as bread), fish, milk and dairy foods,
vegetables, fruit (especially dried fruit) and nuts.
Minerals are
necessary for three main reasons:
· - building
strong bones and teeth
· -
controlling body fluids inside and outside cells
· -
turning the food we eat into energy
These are all essential
minerals:
· calcium
· iron
· magnesium
· phosphorus
· potassium
· sodium
· sulphur
What
are trace elements?
Trace elements
are also essential nutrients that your body needs to work properly,
but in much smaller
amounts than vitamins and minerals.
Trace elements
are found in small amounts in a variety of foods such as meat, fish,
cereals, milk and dairy foods, vegetables and nuts.
These are all trace
elements:
· boron
· cobalt
· copper
· chromium
· fluoride
· iodine
· manganese
· molybdenum
· selenium
· silicon
· zinc
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