Non-Vegetarian | Main Course
| Prep Time | Cook Time | Total Time | Servings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 min | 25 min | 45 min | 3 |
Chicken liver is the single best dietary source of haem iron - easily absorbed at 15–35% bioavailability, versus 2–20% for plant iron. Also rich in B12 and folate. Limit to 2–3 servings per week due to high Vitamin A content.
| Nutrient | Per Serving | % RDA Men | % RDA Women |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calories | ~320 kcal | — | — |
| Protein | ~34 g | 63% (RDA: 54 g) | 74% (RDA: 46 g) |
| Haem Iron | ~15.0 mg | 79% (RDA: 19 mg) | 52% (RDA: 29 mg) |
| Vitamin B12 | ~22 mcg | >>RDA 2.2 mcg | >>RDA 2.2 mcg |
| Folate | ~590 mcg | >>RDA 300 mcg | >>RDA 220 mcg |
| Vitamin C | ~12 mg | 15% (RDA: 80 mg) | 18% (RDA: 65 mg) |
| Carbohydrates | ~14 g | — | — |
Iron source data: IFCT 2017. Chicken liver: Food Code G014, Poultry Table, Mineral & Trace Elements Table (Table 5) — 9.0 mg iron per 100g. Per serving calculated as 167g (500g total ÷ 3 servings) × 9.0 mg/100g = ~15.0 mg haem iron per serving. Haem iron bioavailability (15–35%): ICMR-NIN 2020, Ch.9, Pg.167–179. RDA: Iron Ch.9 Pg.167 (Men 19 mg/day, Women 29 mg/day). B12: Ch.12.6, Pg.244 (2.2 mcg/day). Folate: Ch.12.5, Pg.236. Vitamin C: Ch.12.7, Pg.250.
High in Vitamin A (retinol) - avoid in early pregnancy (first trimester). Contains common poultry allergens.
Best served with soft bajra roti or whole wheat paratha. Squeeze extra lemon before eating.