Gout Diet - Foods to Eat
Often the gout diet foods to eat and avoid lists are not mutually exclusive, leaving many patients confused. While the intake of purines must be reduced, one cannot exclude them entirely from one's diet.

Uric acid is a by-product of the process of the breaking down of purines, which are substances found naturally in the body, as well as in certain foods. As it is usually present in the body, it (uric acid) dissolves in one's blood and passes through the kidneys into the urine. However, at times either too much uric acid is produced, or the kidneys excrete too little uric acid. This is when it can build up and form into crystals. While gout can be effectively treated with gout medication, what can also help is following a gout diet. Foods to eat would obviously be those that have a low content of purines.
Gout Diet: Foods to Avoid
It goes without saying that, one must strictly avoid foods rich in purines. Some of the purine rich foods that are to be avoided with gout are as follows:
- Herring
- Organ meats (liver, kidney, brain)
- Mushrooms
- Anchovies
- Asparagus
- Sweetbreads
- Sardines
- Mackerel
- Mussels
- Yeast
- Smelt
- Grouse, mutton, veal, bacon
- Salmon, trout, scallops
- Turkey, goose, pheasant
- Partridge
- Haddock
- Alcohol (not a food, but to be avoided nonetheless).
An ideal gout diet, is a balanced one. All recommendations place great emphasis on a balanced diet comprising fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fat-free or low-fat milk products. When on a gout diet, foods to eat (in MODERATE quantities) include:
- Foods high in vitamin C, which include red cabbage, tangerines, red bell peppers, potatoes, mandarins and oranges. The reason behind this is that vitamin C may reduce the levels of uric acid in your blood. However, too much of vitamin C may increase your body's uric acid levels. Hence, consume it in its natural form and in moderate quantities.
- Cherries have also been associated with lower levels of uric acid, so one may include cherries, blackberries, blueberries, purple grapes and raspberries (dark-colored fruits) to their diet, in moderate amounts.
- Safe foods to eat with gout include vegetables such as kale, cabbage, parsley and green-leafy vegetables in your diet. Vegetables that are moderately high in purines are asparagus, cauliflower, mushrooms, peas, spinach, kidney and lima beans.
- Include complex carbohydrates such as whole grain breads, cereals and pasta in your diet.
- There is a possibility that low-fat dairy products may actually have a protective effect against gout, so try to make them your primary sources of protein.
- Keep your daily consumption of lean meat, fish and poultry to 4 to 6 ounces (114 to 170 grams).
- Foods low in protein (15% of calories and sources should be soy, lean meats, or poultry).
- High in complex carbohydrates (fiber-rich whole grains, fruits, and vegetables).
- No more than 30% of calories in fat (with only 10% animal fats).
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