A Pro-Thyroid Guide to Vegetables (Ray Peat-Inspired) good or bad?

Joel Radley

Are Vegetables Bad for Your Thyroid? A Pro-Thyroid Guide to Vegetables (Ray Peat-Inspired)

If you’ve entered the pro-metabolism or “Ray Peat” corner of the internet, you may have noticed something curious: a noticeable lack of green smoothie worship and kale salad praise. Many discussions revolve around the impact of different foods on your thyroid health and their role in supporting your thyroid.

Compared to diets like Paleo, Whole30, or plant-based protocols, the metabolic nutrition world often seems… less enthusiastic about vegetables.

Does that mean veggies are bad for your thyroid or metabolism? Not at all. But they’re also not the miracle foods many wellness influencers make them out to be. As always, the answer lies in context and balance, especially regarding your thyroid health.

Let’s talk about what that looks like, and how vegetables can be a pro-thyroid part of your nutrition if prepared and chosen wisely to support your thyroid health and overall well-being.

Why the Metabolic World Is Cautious About Veggies

For years, diet culture has glorified raw vegetables, giant salads, green juices, and kale, as the pinnacle of health. But if you’ve ever wondered why your body didn’t feel good after those meals, there’s likely a good reason.

In the Ray Peat and pro-metabolic world, vegetables are understood through a biological and evolutionary lens, not just a nutrition label.

Here’s why:

Raw Greens Are Hard to Digest

Humans are not herbivores. Unlike cows, goats, or deer, we only have one stomach and lack the enzymes needed to fully break down raw plant cellulose. Cattle have four chambers in their stomach specifically designed to process tough greens, we don’t.

This doesn’t mean you can’t ever eat spinach or kale, but it does mean cooking, fermenting, or choosing tender varieties is often a better choice, especially if you’re healing your thyroid, gut, or hormone balance.

Above-Ground Plants Contain More Plant Toxins

Plants can’t run away, so many produce chemical compounds to defend themselves from predators. These are known as anti-nutrients, and they can inhibit mineral absorption, irritate the gut lining, and impair digestion in sensitive individuals.

Oxalates, lectins, and goitrogens (like those found in cruciferous veggies) can be problematic in excess. This doesn’t mean you have to avoid broccoli forever, it just means moderation and preparation matter.

Low-Calorie Veggie-Heavy Diets Can Crash Your Metabolism

Many women are taught that eating large salads equals success. But if your meals are mostly low-calorie vegetables, it’s easy to undereat, which can tank your thyroid.

Imagine a breakfast of eggs, but lunch and dinner are salads with minimal protein and fat. You could be hovering around 700 calories a day without realising it. Over time, that leads to blood sugar crashes, intense cravings, fatigue, and yes, thyroid suppression.

So, Should You Eat Vegetables?

Absolutely, but with intention and balance. Here’s how to make vegetables pro-thyroid, not depleting.

1. Cook Your Greens

Steamed or sautéed spinach, kale, and chard are easier on digestion than raw. Cooking reduces oxalate and goitrogen load, making their minerals more available and less irritating to your gut and thyroid. I personally would add lots of butter, cream or extra virgin olive oil to the above. I would opt for peas, carrots and cabbage steamed over kale or chard too.

2. Choose Baby Greens and Lettuce Over Tougher LeavesYour Greens

If you love a salad, opt for baby arugula, butter lettuce, or romaine instead of raw kale or collards. These are gentler on the digestive tract and still provide fiber, hydration, and crunch.

3. Pair Veggies with All Macros Your Greens

Don’t eat vegetables alone. Always include high-quality animal protein, good fats, and a bioavailable carbohydrate like fruit, white rice, or root veggies. Your thyroid needs adequate energy and nutrients to function well.

4. Pay Attention to How You Feel After Raw Veggie

If you feel cold, bloated, or fatigued after raw vegetables, you’re not imagining it. That can be a sign your body prefers them cooked or fermented. Try tracking your symptoms and adjusting accordingly.

5. Prioritize Root Vegetables

Root veggies like carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, beets, and parsnips grow underground and contain fewer plant defense compounds. They’re nutrient-dense, energy-rich, and far easier to digest. These are a cornerstone of pro-metabolic and thyroid-supportive eating.

6. Don’t Forget the “Fruity Vegetables”

Tomatoes, cucumbers, bell peppers, squashes, and zucchini are technically fruits. They contain seeds, are lower in plant toxins, and often digest better than leafy greens. Many people find these easier to tolerate raw or lightly cooked.

7. Use Fermented Vegetables for Extra Gut Support

Fermenting vegetables lowers anti-nutrients and introduces beneficial bacteria that support gut health and digestion. Sauerkraut, fermented carrots, or kimchi can be excellent additions to a thyroid-friendly diet. Just go slow and listen to your body.

What About the Raw Carrot Salad?How You Feel After Raw Veggie

This little salad has become legendary in the pro-metabolic world, and for good reason. Originally suggested by Dr. Ray Peat, it includes:

  • Shredded raw carrot
  • A dash of coconut oil or olive oil
  • A splash of vinegar (white or apple cider)
  • Sea salt to taste

The fiber in carrots is unique and shown to help with estrogen detox, endotoxin clearance, and gut motility, all key pieces of thyroid health. Many women report reduced PMS symptoms, improved digestion, and better mood after incorporating it regularly.

It’s not a magic pill, but it is a very helpful tool. I also love adding grated apple or ginger for variety, especially in the fall.

What Did Ray Peat Say About Vegetables?

“Poor people, especially in the spring when other foods were scarce, have sometimes subsisted on foliage such as collard and poke greens… But when people try to live primarily on foliage, as in famines, they soon suffer from a great variety of diseases. Various leaves contain antimetabolic substances that prevent the assimilation of the nutrients, and only very specifically adapted digestive systems (or technologies) can overcome those toxic effects.”
– Ray Peat

This quote sums it up well: vegetables are useful, but not foundational. They are supportive, not central.

What Did Ray Peat Say About Vegetables?

In a pro-thyroid, pro-metabolic framework, vegetables are welcome, especially when:

  • Cooked or fermented
  • Balanced with other macronutrients
  • Chosen for digestibility
  • Used to complement, not replace, nutrient-dense foods

You don’t have to eat kale to be healthy. You also don’t need to fear vegetables. What matters is choosing foods that support your biology, your energy, and your real-life preferences.You’re Not Crazy. You’re Undernourished.

If you’ve been dismissed, gaslit, or told your labs are “normal” despite feeling half-alive… you’re not alone.

You’re not lazy or imagining it.
Your body is starved for the nutrients it can’t absorb, and no one’s connected the dots yet.


This is the work I do with women every day:
Rebuilding energy, digestion, and thyroid health by addressing the real root causes, not just managing symptoms with more meds and mystery.

If you’re ready to get out of the fog and into a functional healing plan that actually works,
reach out and let’s find what your body’s been missing.

Reach out via messaging me, and I’ll send you my free
“Test Your Thyroid at Home” guide and share how we can work together 1:1 to restore your thyroid, gut, and energy, for good.

Migrate / Clone

Warmly,

Joel

Share this Article

Picture of About Joel Radley

About Joel Radley

Joel Radley dipNT, BSc (Hons), mBANT, mCNHC, functional nutritionist specialising in root-cause natural healthcare, ancestral eating & lifestyle. Developer of the four-pillar protocol to help clients holistically, covering nutrition, energetics, emotions and mindfulness. I help concerns of the thyroid, adrenal, fatigue, hormones, gut health, eating disorders & chronic pain.

For over a decade supporting individuals like you and me, high performers, creatives, public figures and entrepreneurs, unlock their dormant healing power and optimize their health potential. I hope you will enjoy the videos, articles & recipes I share on my website, blog & social media. If you have a deeper concern that requires the help of an expert practitioner, do not hesitate and join the waiting list by booking a free call on the calendar. Warmly, Joel

Picture of About Joel Radley

About Joel Radley

Joel Radley dipNT, BBC (Hons), mBANT, mCNHC, nutritional therapist and naturopath specialising in root-cause natural healthcare, ancestral eating & lifestyle.

Developer of the four-pillar protocol to help clients holistically, covering nutrition, energetics, emotions and mindfulness. I help concerns of the thyroid, adrenal, fatigue, hormones, gut health, eating disorders & chronic pain.

For over a decade supporting individuals like you and me, high performers, creatives, public figures and entrepreneurs, unlock their dormant healing power and optimize their health potential.

I hope you will enjoy the free videos, articles & recipes I share on my website, blog and social media. If you have a deeper concern that requires the help of an expert practitioner, do not hesitate and join the waiting list by booking a free call on the calendar. Warmly, Joel

news-2611

yakinjp


sabung ayam online

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

judi bola online

slot thailand

yakinjp

yakinjp

2106

2107

2108

2109

2110

2111

2112

2113

2114

2115

2116

2117

2118

2119

2120

2121

2122

2123

2124

2125

2196

2197

2198

2199

2200

2201

2202

2203

2204

2205

3001

3002

3003

3004

3005

3006

3007

3008

3009

3010

2126

2127

2128

2129

2130

2131

2132

2133

2134

2135

2206

2207

2208

2209

2210

2211

2212

2213

2214

2215

3011

3012

3013

3014

3015

3016

3017

3018

3019

3020

2136

2137

2138

2139

2140

2141

2142

2143

2144

2145

2216

2217

2218

2219

2220

2221

2222

2223

2224

2225

3021

3022

3023

3024

3025

2076

2077

2078

2079

2080

2081

2082

2083

2084

2085

2146

2147

2148

2149

2150

2151

2152

2153

2154

2155

2226

2227

2228

2229

2230

2231

2232

2233

2234

2235

3026

3027

3028

3029

3030

3031

3032

3033

3034

3035

2066

2067

2068

2069

2070

2071

2072

2073

2074

2075

2166

2167

2168

2169

2170

2171

2172

2173

2174

2175

2236

2237

2238

2239

2240

2241

2242

2243

2244

2245

3036

3037

3038

3039

3040

3041

3042

3043

3044

3045

2156

2157

2158

2159

2160

2161

2162

2163

2164

2165

2246

2247

2248

2249

2250

2251

2252

2253

2254

2255

2176

2177

2178

2179

2180

2181

2182

2183

2184

2185

3046

3047

3048

3049

3050

2186

2187

2188

2189

2190

2191

2192

2193

2194

2195

3051

3052

3053

3054

3055

3056

3057

3058

3059

3060

3061

3062

3063

3064

3065

3066

3067

3068

3069

3070

3071

3072

3073

3074

3075

news-2611