Nutrient Glossary
Nutrition basics: Essentials about vitamins, minerals, and more
We all benefit from a healthy diet, but good nutrition is especially important for growing babies and toddlers. Their little bodies need the right nutrients—in the right amounts—so they can develop into healthy teens and adults. Those nutrients include proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals. Here are the need-to-know basics about each and how they work together to form a healthy diet.
Calories
Protein
Fat
Carbohydrates
Vitamins
Minerals
Other newsworthy nutrients
Calories
Calories refer to the energy provided by the carbohydrates, fats, and protein found in foods and beverages. Appropriate energy balance is important for growth and development. This balance depends on energy intake from food and energy used during activity. That's why it's important to:
- Follow your child's hunger and fullness cues
- Provide her with healthy options
- Let her regulate how much she eats
- Encourage her activity
Protein
Protein provides calories and helps build, maintain, and repair body tissues. Protein is made up of about 20 amino acids. These amino acids are either essential or nonessential. Our bodies can make nonessential amino acids, but not the essential amino acids. These nine essential amino acids need to be supplied by our diets.
Proteins can also be classified as complete or incomplete:
| Proteins |
What it is |
Food sources |
Complete proteins |
Proteins that contain all the essential amino acids |
Animal products such as meat and milk |
Incomplete proteins |
Proteins that usually lack one or more essential amino acids |
Plant foods such as grains |
Fat
Fat provides more energy than carbohydrates and proteins and helps the body use certain vitamins. Fat is made up of fatty acids. The essential ones—omega-3 and omega-6—must come from food because the body cannot make them. Some examples include:
| Fatty acid |
What it is |
Food sources |
DHA |
An omega-3 fatty acid that helps support brain and eye development |
Fatty fish (salmon, tuna) |
ALA |
An omega-3 fatty acid that's important for overall healthy growth and development |
Canola oil and mayonnaise |
Omega-6 fatty acids |
Plentiful in the diet |
Vegetable oils such as soybean and corn |
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are the body's primary source of energy. Healthy sources of carbohydrates include fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and beans. They're considered nutrient-dense foods because they have calories but also vitamins, minerals, and fiber.
There are two forms of carbohydrates: simple and complex.
Simple: Carbohydrates that are composed of one to two units, such as sugars.
Complex: Carbohydrates that are composed of more than two units, such as starch and fiber. Starch can eventually be broken down into simple carbohydrates. But fiber remains intact, and although it doesn't serve as an energy source, it helps the body in other ways.
| Carbohydrate |
What it does |
Food sources |
Whole grains |
Aids in digestion, helps stabilize blood sugar |
Whole-grain breads and cereals, whole-wheat pasta, brown or wild rice |
Fiber |
Helps aid in digestion |
Fruits, vegetables, whole-grain products |
Sugar |
Quick release of energy |
Naturally found in foods such as fruits, milk, and 100% juice; table sugar can also be added to foods |
Vitamins
Vitamins play many important roles in our bodies. They‘re classified as either fat-soluble or water-soluble. Fat-soluble vitamins, such as vitamin A, can be stored in the body and dissolve in fat. Water-soluble vitamins, such as vitamin C, are not stored in the body in large amounts and dissolve in water.
| Fat-soluble vitamin |
What it does |
Food sources |
Vitamin A |
Helps aid vision and growth; vitamin A (from beta carotene) helps support a healthy immune system |
Whole milk and fortified dairy products; eggs; red, yellow, and orange fruits and vegetables; dark green vegetables |
Vitamin D |
Supports bone health and helps with calcium absorption |
Fortified dairy and grain products, fatty fish such as salmon |
Vitamin E |
Protects cells from damage |
Vegetable oils, salad dressings, fortified cereals |
| Fat-soluble vitamin |
What it does |
Food sources |
Vitamin C |
Helps keep gums healthy, helps heal cuts, may help with the absorption of iron and folate from food |
Fruits and vegetables (red bell peppers, oranges, strawberries, tomatoes) and vitamin-C-fortified products |
Thiamin (vitamin B1) |
Helps the body turn carbohydrates into energy |
Whole-grain or fortified rice, bread, pasta, and cereals |
Riboflavin (vitamin B2) |
Helps the body convert food into energy |
Dairy products, fortified breads and cereals, meat, eggs, and green, leafy vegetables |
Niacin |
Helps convert food into energy |
Poultry, fish, beef, fortified breads, cereals, and pastas |
Pyridoxine (vitamin B6) |
Helps the body make insulin, hemoglobin, and antibodies (to fight infections) |
Chicken, fish, pork, whole grains, beans |
Folic acid |
Plays an essential role in producing DNA |
Orange juice, lentils, beans, spinach, fortified breads, cereals, and pasta |
Vitamin B12 (cobalamin) |
Works with folic acid to make red blood cells |
Meat, fish, poultry, eggs, dairy products, fortified cereals |
Minerals
Minerals play important roles in our body, and they're considered either major or trace. Major minerals such as calcium and magnesium are needed in larger amounts than trace minerals. Trace minerals, such as iron and copper, are needed in smaller amounts.
| Mineral |
What it does |
Food sources |
Calcium |
Builds strong bones; aids blood clotting, plays a role in proper nerve function, and helps the heart beat |
Dairy products, green leafy vegetables; calcium-fortified breads; juices; and other products |
Iron |
A component of hemoglobin, which carries oxygen through the body; aids in healthy brain development |
Meat, poultry, fish, fortified grains, whole grains, eggs, beans, some fruits, and vegetables such as spinach |
Potassium |
Regulates fluids and mineral balance in and out of cells, helps with muscle contraction and nerve transmission, and helps maintain normal blood pressure |
Fruits and vegetables (such as bananas, potatoes, spinach, tomatoes), dairy products, beans, meat, fish, and poultry |
Zinc |
A building block of a healthy immune system that's essential for growth and helps repair cellstd>
| Meat, seafood, eggs, milk, whole-grain products, and zinc-fortified foods |
Copper |
Helps make energy for cells and helps make hemoglobin, which carries oxygen to the body |
Seafood, organ meats (such as liver) and mushrooms |
Magnesium |
Builds bones, helps muscles contract and relax |
Beans, whole-grain products, green leafy vegetables |
Choline |
Helps with growth and liver function |
Meat, eggs, soybeans |
Other newsworthy nutrients
You may have heard about phytonutrients and antioxidants. These compounds are getting more attention because research is showing their many health benefits. Not sure what they are? Here's a brief summary:
| Nutrient |
What they are |
Food sources |
Phytonutrients |
Plant-based chemicals believed to prevent cancer and decrease the risk of heart disease |
Certain fruits, vegetables, grains, beans, and teas |
Antioxidants |
Substances in food that protect cells from damage, which may help prevent cancer, heart disease, and other diseases |
Fruits, vegetables, grains, and fortified foods |
Please note that many of the foods listed as food sources are intended for older babies and toddlers and may be allergens or choking hazards for younger babies. Be sure to talk with your baby's doctor before starting a new food.