Forget Probiotics, An Apple A Day Is Better For Your Gut Health
From our mood to our skin health, everything starts in the gut. More of us now understand this core tenet of our wellbeing and act accordinglyâdoing what we can to feed the good bacteria in our microbiomes. But, as is so often the case, sometimes we over-complicate matters. I realised I might be guilty of the same when scientist and dietitian Dr Emily Leemingâs Substack newsletter, Second Brain, dropped into my inbox the other day. In it, she outlined the probiotic powerâ100 million microbes worthâof the humble apple.
Glorious, crunchy apples. Infinitely cheaper than probiotic supplements, the apple is packed with hundreds of millions of microbesâjust like other fruits and vegetables, all of which contribute bacteria to the microbiome. âApples contain fibre, and particularly a probiotic fibre called pectin, that feeds your âgoodâ gut bacteria,â says Dr Leeming, whose forthcoming book Genius Gut: How to Eat For Your Second Brain, comes out in July. âIt also contains plenty of polyphenols, which have a prebiotic effect on the gut microbiome.â
The growing obsession with probiotics means many of us could be tempted to prioritize taking a supplement over incorporating more microbe-rich plants into our dietsâbut you canât out-supplement an unhealthy lifestyle. Many of us donât actually need to be taking them in the first place. Yes, taking certain strains of bacteria via (evidence-based and well-made) probiotics can help us treat health issues, such as IBS-related bloating, or aid the microbiomeâs recovery after taking antibiotics, but Dr Leeming says you âdonât need to take a probiotic supplement if youâre already well and just generally want to support your gut microbiome. What you eat has a far bigger impact,â she says.
Leeming describes the probiotic supplement market as the âwild west.â Many brands make big claims with scant evidence to support them. Some of the bad supplements on the market contain multiple types of probiotic bacteria, which havenât been tested as a combinationâand they can act differently when put together. Others have been shown to deliver the opposite effect to what they promise on the box. âAs an example, cognition may get worse rather than better, or the gut microbiome may recover slower after antibiotics,â she warns.
But you canât go wrong with the health benefits of an appleâor, indeed, any fruit or vegetable. Experts now recommend eating at least 30 different plants a week â including spices, herbs, legumes and grains, alongside fruit and vegetablesâto improve your gut health. There is clear evidence that demonstrates how impactful fiber and polyphenols are on feeding the gut microbiome, so aim to incorporate more plants into your diet each day to nourish yourself. It really is as easy as that.
âWe donât yet know if organic fruit and vegetables contain more microbes than non-organic and if that makes a difference to the gut microbiome,â adds Dr Leeming. âBut soil health likely plays a huge role in how microbe-rich the foods we eat are, particularly for fruit and veg that are grown close to or in the soil, like root vegetablesâsoil is particularly dense in microbes. One teaspoon of soil contains more microbes than people on the planet.â