Magnesium is an essential mineral for growing children as it is involved in more than 300 different chemical reactions in the human body. It plays multiple important roles in the human body, from promoting metabolism, improving energy, enhancing bone health to increasing muscle function and relaxation, ensuring heart health, preventing tooth problems, and boosting a stressed immune system.
With so many amazing health benefits, meeting the daily required magnesium intake is essential. Infants aged 0 to 6 months need 30 mg/day, babies aged 7 to 12 months require 75 mg/day, toddlers aged 1 to 3 years need 80 mg/day, children aged 4 to 8 years require 130 mg/day, while kids aged 9 to 13 years need at least 240 mg per day.
Unlike vitamin D and vitamin B12, magnesium is relatively easy to source, as multiple foods are rich in important micronutrients. Here is a quick guide to foods to add to your kids’ diet that prevent magnesium deficiency in children.
Fruits and Vegetables - Vegetables like spinach, Swiss chard, tamarind, potatoes with their skins, okra, and broccoli are rich sources of magnesium. Among fruits, bananas, apples, avocados, and blackberries are rich sources of magnesium. While a half cup of cooked spinach provides 75 mg of magnesium, a medium banana provides 32 gm, and a cup of blackberries provides 29 mg of magnesium. Incorporate these fruits and veggies into your kids’ diet and watch them work wonders for your kid.
Nuts and seeds - Pumpkin seeds are a superfood for magnesium, providing 592 mg per 100 gm of dried pumpkin seeds. Among others, an ounce of almond provides 80 mg of magnesium, while cashews, peanuts, chia seeds, and the rest follow in close pursuit. Incorporate nuts and seeds in your kids’ diet by making granola at home and pairing it with some yogurt or making tasty trail mixes at home to boost your kids’ magnesium levels on the go.
Legumes - Among legumes, soybeans, black beans, kidney beans, lentils, and edamame are wonderful sources of magnesium, offering between 50 to 70 mg of magnesium per serving. Kids who are fussy with soybeans and edamame can go for soya chunks as they are a tastier alternative that goes well in pulaos, snacks, and curries. As for young fans of Mexican cuisine, feed them homemade burrito bowls full of black beans and kidney beans, or add fancy names to ordinary Indian dals and rajma curries by internationally plating them, like lentil soup or kidney beans and pilaf (a fancy name for pulao).
Fatty fish - Some fatty fish, like salmon, mackerel, and halibut pack a lot of magnesium in them. In fact, a 100-gm serving of cooked salmon packs 30 mg of magnesium. And when paired with broccoli, and some lentils, a wholesome meal rich in magnesium and multiple other micronutrients nourishes your child and improves their health.
Whole grains - Bread and fortified breakfast cereals like quinoa, oats, and brown rice are great sources of magnesium. As only 2 slices of whole wheat bread offer 46 mg of magnesium, while ½ cup of cooked brown rice provides 42 mg of magnesium, whole grains are a great way of incorporating carbs, energy, and magnesium into your kids’ diet. Make them quinoa bowls or whole grain bowls filled with vegetables, proteins, and legumes, and watch your children gobble them down. You can also take the dessert path and make some overnight oats or ragi pancakes. Sometimes, even low-fat, homemade bread pudding wins the deal.