The Magical Fruit: Beans Nutrition Comparison
Beans are one of the very best foods you can eat. No matter what type of bean you’re eating, they’re all rich in fiber, especially insoluble fiber which keeps things moving along through your digestive tract, regulates blood sugar, can protect against heart disease.
You might know me as the nutritionist to celebrities, but most of my clients are ordinary people whose families I’ve known for years. They’re regular people who value a dollar just as much as the rest of us.
Beans are the most economical protein you can buy; even organic beans are inexpensive compared to organic meat and poultry. And stock up when you see a sale – dried beans keep up to two years in the pantry. Cooked beans can be frozen for up to three months.
On the Fast Metabolism Diet, you can use ½ cup cooked beans in place of 4 oz. of meat for your protein on Phase 1 and Phase 3.
Bean benefits
All beans are high in magnesium, phosphorus, potassium and folate, with some calcium as well. Folate is especially important because it protects your heart and mental faculties, and in pregnant women it helps prevents birth defects.
Beans also contain many of the 20 amino acids including lysine, which scavenges cellulite and surface fat, leaving you looking sleek and lean. If you’re eating beans as a protein source, they must be combined with a grain, such as brown rice, to create a complete protein similar to what you’d get from meat. (This is also one reason you don’t want to choose beans for Phase 3 lunch, there’s no grain at lunch time.)
With all those similarities, it’s easy to think that all beans are alike — but that’s not the case. Here’s a peek at the specific nutritional benefits of some of the beans on the Fast Metabolism Diet.
Looking for a meal that will really sustain you? Look to navy, adzuki, pinto and black beans, which have the highest fiber content. Concerned about calcium? Navy beans have almost three times as much as black beans. Need to find a potassium source to replace that banana you used to have every day? Just ½ cup of adzuki beans has twice the potassium of small banana!
Make the most of your beans
No matter what sort of dried beans you’re buying, look for bean seeds that are bright and smooth, with minimal cracking and no broken beans. Keep in mind that the cooking process can take a while: Soaking the beans overnight will help cut down on the hard-to-digest complex sugars that cause gas; then the beans need to be simmered for 45 minutes to 2 hours, depending on the variety, before they become soft and tender. If you need your beans in a hurry, opt for pre-cooked canned beans in BPA-free packaging.
Per cup, cooked: Beans nutrition comparison
Adzuki beans
Black beans
Black-eyed peas (cowpeas)
Chickpeas (garbanzo beans)
Kidney beans
Lima beans
Navy beans
Pinto beans
How they taste
Nutty, slightly sweet
Sweet, a little bit earthy
Smooth, creamy, earthy
Nutty, buttery-smooth
Meaty, robust
Buttery-smooth, mildly sweet
Very mild, sweet
Earthy, a little bit sweet
Fiber
16.8g
15.4g
11.2g
12.5g
11.3g
13.2g
19.1g
15.4g
Calcium
65mg
46mg
41.3mg
80mg
62mg
32mg
126mg
79mg
Iron
4.6mg
3.61mg
4.3mg
4.74mg
3.93mg
4.49mg
4.3mg
3.57mg
Magnesium
120mg
120mg
91.1mg
79mg
74mg
81mg
96mg
86mg
Phosphorus
386mg
241mg
268mg
276mg
244mg
209mg
262mg
251mg
Potassium
1224mg
611mg
478mg
477mg
717mg
955mg
708mg
746mg
Sodium
18mg
2mg
6.9mg
11mg
2mg
4mg
0mg
2mg
Zinc
4.07mg
1.93mg
2.2mg
2.51mg
1.77mg
1.79mg
1.87mg
1.68mg
Folate
278mcg
159mcg
358mcg
282mcg
230mcg
156mcg
255mcg
294mcg
Beans are one of the very best foods you can eat. No matter what type of bean you’re eating, they’re all rich in fiber, especially insoluble fiber which keeps things moving along through your digestive tract, regulates blood sugar, can protect against heart disease.
You might know me as the nutritionist to celebrities, but most of my clients are ordinary people whose families I’ve known for years. They’re regular people who value a dollar just as much as the rest of us.
Beans are the most economical protein you can buy; even organic beans are inexpensive compared to organic meat and poultry. And stock up when you see a sale – dried beans keep up to two years in the pantry. Cooked beans can be frozen for up to three months.
On the Fast Metabolism Diet, you can use ½ cup cooked beans in place of 4 oz. of meat for your protein on Phase 1 and Phase 3.
Bean benefits
All beans are high in magnesium, phosphorus, potassium and folate, with some calcium as well. Folate is especially important because it protects your heart and mental faculties, and in pregnant women it helps prevents birth defects.
Beans also contain many of the 20 amino acids including lysine, which scavenges cellulite and surface fat, leaving you looking sleek and lean. If you’re eating beans as a protein source, they must be combined with a grain, such as brown rice, to create a complete protein similar to what you’d get from meat. (This is also one reason you don’t want to choose beans for Phase 3 lunch, there’s no grain at lunch time.)
With all those similarities, it’s easy to think that all beans are alike — but that’s not the case. Here’s a peek at the specific nutritional benefits of some of the beans on the Fast Metabolism Diet.
Looking for a meal that will really sustain you? Look to navy, adzuki, pinto and black beans, which have the highest fiber content. Concerned about calcium? Navy beans have almost three times as much as black beans. Need to find a potassium source to replace that banana you used to have every day? Just ½ cup of adzuki beans has twice the potassium of small banana!
Make the most of your beans
No matter what sort of dried beans you’re buying, look for bean seeds that are bright and smooth, with minimal cracking and no broken beans. Keep in mind that the cooking process can take a while: Soaking the beans overnight will help cut down on the hard-to-digest complex sugars that cause gas; then the beans need to be simmered for 45 minutes to 2 hours, depending on the variety, before they become soft and tender. If you need your beans in a hurry, opt for pre-cooked canned beans in BPA-free packaging.
Per cup, cooked: Beans nutrition comparison
Adzuki beans | Black beans | Black-eyed peas (cowpeas) | Chickpeas (garbanzo beans) | Kidney beans | Lima beans | Navy beans | Pinto beans | |
How they taste | Nutty, slightly sweet | Sweet, a little bit earthy | Smooth, creamy, earthy | Nutty, buttery-smooth | Meaty, robust | Buttery-smooth, mildly sweet | Very mild, sweet | Earthy, a little bit sweet |
Fiber | 16.8g | 15.4g | 11.2g | 12.5g | 11.3g | 13.2g | 19.1g | 15.4g |
Calcium | 65mg | 46mg | 41.3mg | 80mg | 62mg | 32mg | 126mg | 79mg |
Iron | 4.6mg | 3.61mg | 4.3mg | 4.74mg | 3.93mg | 4.49mg | 4.3mg | 3.57mg |
Magnesium | 120mg | 120mg | 91.1mg | 79mg | 74mg | 81mg | 96mg | 86mg |
Phosphorus | 386mg | 241mg | 268mg | 276mg | 244mg | 209mg | 262mg | 251mg |
Potassium | 1224mg | 611mg | 478mg | 477mg | 717mg | 955mg | 708mg | 746mg |
Sodium | 18mg | 2mg | 6.9mg | 11mg | 2mg | 4mg | 0mg | 2mg |
Zinc | 4.07mg | 1.93mg | 2.2mg | 2.51mg | 1.77mg | 1.79mg | 1.87mg | 1.68mg |
Folate | 278mcg | 159mcg | 358mcg | 282mcg | 230mcg | 156mcg | 255mcg | 294mcg |