Home / What is Teff? / Teff & Fiber
Teff is rich in dietary fiber, a key driver of its health benefits. Understanding the types of fiber it contains helps explain the advantages of including teff in your diet.
Dietary fiber is essential for good health because it supports healthy digestion, helps regulate blood sugar, and contributes to heart health. It promotes feelings of fullness, which can aid in weight management, and fuels beneficial gut bacteria that play a role in immunity and overall well-being.
Dietary fiber has numerous well-documented benefits for many systems in the body. We’ll just briefly discuss the benefits to various body systems here. Higher total fiber intakes (≈14 g per 1,000 kcal; ~25 g/day women, ~38 g/day men) are linked with lower risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and some cancers.
Adequate consumption of dietary fiber has been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases. These diseases include coronary heart disease, where the coronary arteries of the heart become blocked. Additionally, fiber has been shown to reduce the risk of stroke. Fiber probably helps to achieve these effect by improving some of the basic cardiovascular risk factors. Fiber consumption helps to reduce blood pressure, as well as improve cholesterol levels. Both high blook pressure and high cholesterol are risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
Dietary fiber is also known to both improve blood sugar control, as well as insulin sensitivity, making fiber consumption an important component of controlling and preventing diabetes. Additionally, fiber helps to reduce obesity by improving satiery, meaning you feel fuller, faster, after eating.
Fiber is known to improve or prevent numerous gastrointestinal diseases, including esophageal cancer, gastric cancer, peptic ulcer disease, gallbladder disease, diverticular disease, gastroesophageal reflux, among others.
The gastrointestinal tract is the largest immune organ in the human body. Proper functioning of the immune system is dependent on the consumption of prebiotics such as fiber that promote the growth of beneficial intestinal microbes and the production by those microbes of short-chain fatty acids that stimulate the immune system.
Dietary fiber is the collection of non-digestible carbohydrates and lignin that resist digestion in the small intestine and are partially or fully consumes by beneficial gut microbes in the large intestine:
Dietary fiber has numerous well-documented benefits for many systems in the body. We’ll just briefly discuss the benefits to various body systems here. Higher total fiber intakes (≈14 g per 1,000 kcal; ~25 g/day women, ~38 g/day men) are linked with lower risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and some cancers.
Adequate consumption of dietary fiber has been shown to reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases. These diseases include coronary heart disease, where the coronary arteries of the heart become blocked. Additionally, fiber has been shown to reduce the risk of stroke. Fiber probably helps to achieve these effect by improving some of the basic cardiovascular risk factors. Fiber consumption helps to reduce blood pressure, as well as improve cholesterol levels. Both high blook pressure and high cholesterol are risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
Dietary fiber is known to both improve blood sugar control, as well as insulin sensitivity, making fiber consumption an important component of controlling and preventing diabetes. Additionally, fiber helps to reduce obesity by improving satiery, meaning you feel fuller, faster, after eating.
Fiber is known to improve or prevent numerous gastrointestinal diseases, including esophageal cancer, gastric cancer, peptic ulcer disease, gallbladder disease, diverticular disease, gastroesophageal reflux, among others.
The gastrointestinal tract is the largest immune organ in the human body. Proper functioning of the immune system is dependent on the consumption of prebiotics such as fiber that promote the growth of beneficial intestinal microbes and the production by those microbes of short-chain fatty acids that stimulate the immune system.
Cereal grains (wheat, rye, barley, oats, sorghum, millet, teff) are dominated by arabinoxylan-rich cell wall fibers and other insoluble fractions; the β-glucan-rich profile (the most “viscous” cholesterol-lowering fiber) is characteristic of oats and barley, not teff. In other words, teff’s strength is total fiber (largely insoluble) and whole-grain delivery, while oats/barley are stand-outs for β-glucan.
Resistant starch (RS) in teff foods—what do studies show?
For context:
The Teff Company grows Maskal Teff in the western USA, a non-GMO gluten-free grain that’s a superfood full of high quality complex carbohydrates, proteins, minerals, and fiber. Teff is an ancient grain native to Ethiopia and Eritrea. Explore our website to learn more about teff. Learn how to make traditional injera or discover 100s of teff recipes from breakfasts to desserts.