Why Gouda is likely the most nutrient dense type of cheese you can buy even if you buy supermarket brands made with conventional milk.
If I was forced to choose a single cheese to eat for the rest of my life that would best maintain my health, it would be Gouda cheese.
Is Gouda my favorite healthy cheese?
Not really.
While I certainly like Gouda cheese and don’t mind eating it, my taste buds consistently rank several other cheeses quite a bit higher on the enjoyment scale such as Brie which I craved during pregnancy.
Why Gouda cheese then?
Gouda and the X Factor
You might be shocked to learn, as I was, that Gouda cheese is higher than most liver, grassfed butter, and even pastured egg yolks in the critical nutrient Vitamin K2.
This is the nutrient identified by Dr. Weston A. Price as the elusive “Activator X”.
Vitamin K2 along with the other fat soluble activators A and D are synergistically responsible for the vibrant health and extremely high resistance to aging and degenerative disease as experienced by Traditional Cultures and as described in Dr. Price’s groundbreaking book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.
Vitamin K2 is extremely difficult to get sufficient quantities of in the diet. This is the case even if one consumes grassfed meats and dairy on a regular basis.
The reason is the worrisome depletion of our soils which grassfed farmers are valiantly turning the tide on, but which will still take several decades if not even a century or two to reverse on a widespread basis.
On top of this, many families are currently struggling to afford any grassfed meat and dairy at all.
An inflationary economy requires creative and practical solutions for the food budget. This ensures that this critical and elusive nutrient is in the diet in sufficient quantities.
This helps secure freedom from tooth decay and high immunity. Such vigilance prevents degenerative diseases like osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, periodontal disease, cancer, and diabetes among many others.
K2 is also the vanity vitamin as it is known to prevent facial wrinkles. K2 deficiency can be written all over your face…quite literally!
Synergy with No Toxicity
Vitamin K2 has no known toxicity even at high intake levels.
However, it is most effective when consumed in the presence of the other fat soluble activators Vitamin A and D.
Therefore, getting Vitamin K2 from food is always the best way to go if at all possible.
Gouda Cheese Top 3 for Most Elusive Nutrient
This is where Gouda cheese comes in.
You see, the food that is highest in Vitamin K2 is natto, which is very difficult to find and even more difficult to consume due to its very horrible taste and texture. If you are game, you can usually find it at Asian specialty stores. Look for it in the freezer section.
Natto contains about 1,103 mcg of K2 per 3.5 ounce portion. This is more than any other food by a large margin. Note that it is best to source organic natto due to toxicity issues from GMO soybeans.
The second highest food in Vitamin K2 is goose fat particularly from the liver which has 369 mcg per 3 1/2 ounce portion.
While highly delicious and wonderful to eat, goose liver pate is very hard to find in most places. It is also a very high end, gourmet food which makes the price out of reach for most.
Rounding out the top 3 foods highest in Vitamin K2 is none other than the humble Gouda cheese. It boasts 75 mcg per 3 1/2 ounce serving! This compares to pastured egg yolks and butter, which each have about 15 mcg of K2 per 3 1/2 ounce portion.
Grassfed or Organic Not Required
Here’s the really excellent news…
Gouda cheese is extremely high in Vitamin K2 even if the milk it’s made from was not grassfed.
This is due to the bacterial cultures used to ferment milk into Gouda cheese. Bacteria produce a special type of Vitamin K2 (MK-7) which according to current research is as effective as the animal form of Vitamin K2 (MK-4) at preserving human health when combined in the diet with the other fat soluble activators A and D.
Of course, grassfed Gouda cheese would be best as Gouda made from this highest quality raw milk would be high not only in MK-7 but also MK-4, the animal form of K2.
For some, however, supermarket Gouda cheese is all they can find or afford!
In other words, Gouda cheese is high in Vitamin K2 regardless of how the milk was produced. Gouda even if made from the milk of the average grainfed, conventionally raised cow, is still very much worth it to buy from a nutritional standpoint!
Other hard cheeses would also be high in Vitamin K2, but Gouda is the highest of them all. Perhaps this is a reason why cheese is the most stolen item in the world!
Sources
Vitamin K2 and the Calcium Paradox, by Dr. Kate Rheaume-Bleue ND
Sasha Garcia Degn via Facebook
Nice and Gouda tastes wonderful too.
Nancy LaFontaine via Facebook
Good to know
Cynthia Winter via Facebook
Good to know. My family loves cheese and it is expensive.
Aron
Gouda, Swiss and Munster are my favorite cheeses. I LOVE Gouda so much!
Yeh Tung
Boerenkaas raw milk mature Gouda is selling at Trader Joe’s for $7.99 a lb!!!
Joe
I was just wondering, would mature gouda be higher in K2 than the regular mild kind. I’m not too clued up about how cheese is made but I figured that maybe the mature kind would have been fermented for longer so would have more K2 in it…any idea? Thanks.
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Wow, I am now so excited to start buying gouda! Thanks for this amazing post!
Nickole
Janelle
I would like to see your research that suggests MK-7 is just as good as MK-4 as an ‘activator-x’. I am speaking of the form that will give children wide faces and straight teeth. Stephan Guyenet says that MK-7 might only be partially converted to MK-4. And one of his readers makes this statement:
“I would be willing to believe that bacterial menaquinones have unique benefits, but I haven’t seen any evidence to support that so far. Many of our organs seem to have a distinct preference for MK-4. It doesn’t last very long in the bloodstream, presumably because our starved organs pump it up immediately. MK-7 has a longer serum half-life. This is a benefit according to its proponents, but I’m skeptical. MK-4 is the form mammals synthesize for their own use and for feeding to their youngsters by way of milk and eggs.”
From my own research I would agree. Here is Stephan’s article on maloclusion and the role of K2: http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2009/11/malocclusion-disease-of-civilization.html
“Certain organs (brain, pancreas, salivary gland, arteries) preferentially accumulate K2 MK-4, and certain cellular processes are also selective for K2 MK-4 (MGP activation, PKA-dependent transcriptional effects).”
“Other menaquinones such as MK-7 (found in natto) may contribute to K2 status as well, but this question has not been resolved.”
I am taking it safe this pregnancy and using butter oil, dairy, pastured eggs, and I also bought the supplement by Thorne Research K2 MK-4 (very pricey compared to the MK-7).
Laurel
Hi Janelle,
I don’t know if you’ll read this since it is some time since you posted, but did you notice what Stephan said in the article you linked to:
“There’s another issue with K2 supplements that I haven’t discussed yet. Natural K2 is all trans, while synthetic K2 MK-4 may contain some of the unnatural cis form. I don’t know what effect cis MK-4 has on the body. I e-mailed Thorne to find out how much cis MK-4 is in their supplement, but never heard back from them. I should try again.”
This made me question whether you should take Thorne’s K2 MK-4 during pregnancy.