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Sardines over Wakame Seaweed Salad (210 Cal, 27g Protein)

·577 words·3 mins

This is the most nutrient-dense item in the entire meal plan by every metric that matters. Sardines deliver omega-3s (EPA and DHA), vitamin D, B12, calcium from the edible bones, and selenium. Wakame adds iodine, magnesium, and fucoxanthin — a carotenoid unique to brown seaweed with documented anti-obesity and anti-inflammatory properties. Per calorie, nothing else in the rotation comes close to this omega-3-plus-iodine combination.

No sesame oil. Most seaweed salad recipes call for it, but sesame oil is high in omega-6 linoleic acid, which competes with omega-3 for the same enzymatic pathways. Using rice vinegar and lemon juice instead keeps the omega-6 to omega-3 ratio favorable.

Nutrition per serving
Calories: 210 | Protein: 27g | Carbs: 4g | Fat: 9g | Fiber: 2g
Sodium: 400mg | Iron: 3.4mg | Calcium: 445mg | Potassium: 560mg | Vitamin D: 220mcg | B12: 8.3mcg | Zinc: 2.1mg | Magnesium: 90mg | Vit A: 110mcg | Vit C: 5mg | Selenium: 38mcg | Folate: 35mcg

Ingredients
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  • 1 can sardines in water, drained
  • 2 tbsp dried wakame seaweed
  • 1 tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1/4 tsp dulse flakes
  • 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
  • 2 tbsp red onion, thinly sliced
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1 can sardines in water, drained
2 tbsp dried wakame seaweed
1 tbsp rice vinegar
1/4 tsp dulse flakes
1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
2 tbsp red onion, thinly sliced

Instructions
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  1. Place dried wakame in a bowl and cover with room temperature water. Soak for 10 minutes until fully rehydrated and tender. Drain and squeeze out excess water.
  2. Dress the wakame with rice vinegar, dulse flakes, and lemon juice. Toss to combine.
  3. Arrange dressed wakame on a plate or in a bowl.
  4. Drain sardines and place them over the wakame.
  5. Top with thinly sliced red onion.
  6. Squeeze additional lemon over the sardines if desired.

Walford Notes
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Wakame is a brown seaweed rich in iodine, magnesium, and fucoxanthin. Fucoxanthin is a xanthophyll carotenoid that upregulates UCP1 in white adipose tissue — essentially increasing thermogenesis. It also has documented anti-inflammatory effects through inhibition of NF-kB. Two tablespoons of dried wakame rehydrate into a substantial portion.

No sesame oil is intentional. Sesame oil is approximately 40% linoleic acid (omega-6). The entire point of eating sardines is their omega-3 content. Adding a concentrated omega-6 source alongside them undermines the n-3:n-6 ratio you are trying to optimize. Rice vinegar and lemon provide acidity and flavor without the lipid trade-off.

Sardine bones are the calcium source here — 445mg per serving, which approaches the calcium content of a glass of milk. The bones are soft and edible in canned sardines. If you are removing them, you are throwing away the calcium.

B12 at 8.3 mcg is 345% of the daily value from a single serving. Sardines are one of the most efficient whole-food B12 sources, surpassed only by organ meats and clams.

Dulse + wakame together stack two different seaweed iodine sources. If you are sensitive to iodine or have thyroid concerns, reduce the dulse to a pinch and monitor. For most people, this level is well within the tolerable upper intake.