Episode 15: The Real Case for Organ Supplementation in Your Next Era

Every wellness podcast has told you about adaptogens.

Almost none have told you about liver.

Sara makes the science-forward case for organ nutrition as the missing category in women's wellness.

A women-first translation of the most nutrient-dense food on the planet, in a form a woman actually wants on her counter.

Topics covered: why beef liver does sixteen jobs at once, the heme iron absorption advantage, why the nutrient matrix matters more than milligrams, how freeze-drying preserves the bioactivity that cooking destroys, why slippery elm and yarrow belong alongside organ nutrition, and what to actually do with all of this whether you eat meat or not.

Key Takeaways

  • A single 3 oz serving of grass-fed beef liver provides around 5 to 6 milligrams of heme iron, around 70 micrograms of B12, a full daily dose of retinol, plus choline, copper, zinc, selenium, B vitamins in their natural ratios, and a protein matrix your body recognizes.

  • Heme iron from animal foods absorbs at 15 to 35 percent. Non-heme iron from plants absorbs at 2 to 20 percent. The gap is a biological fact, not a marketing claim.

  • Your body uses nutrients in synergy, not isolation. Vitamin A needs zinc. Iron needs copper. B vitamins work as a family. Whole-food nutrition delivers the matrix your body has been assembling from animals for as long as there have been human bodies.

  • Micronutrient status and sex steroid hormones are directly linked. B6 affects estrogen metabolism. Zinc and copper cofactor thyroid hormone synthesis. Iron is required for T4 to T3 conversion.

  • Freeze-drying preserves 90 to 97 percent of original nutrient content. Older organ supplements were often heat-dried and underperformed whole organ meat. Freeze-dried, grass-fed, pasture-raised is the form that carries the promise.

  • Slippery elm and yarrow pair with organ nutrition to soften its traditional roughness on the gut. BioPerine black pepper extract raises absorption. The synergy is the point.

Research Mentioned

This episode is an educational translation of the following peer-reviewed research. Click any citation to read the original paper.

1.     Cervoni B, Pataky Z, Golay A, et al. "Sex Steroid Hormones and Their Links With Micronutrient Status." Frontiers in Endocrinology, 2022. doi:10.3389/fendo.2022.924338 https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fendo.2022.924338/full

2.     Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. "Iron · The Nutrition Source." Reference resource on heme vs. non-heme iron absorption. https://nutritionsource.hsph.harvard.edu/iron/

3.     "Trace Minerals and Female Fertility Outcomes." PubMed, 2024. PMID 39125376. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39125376/

4.     Nowak D, Jakubczyk E. "The Freeze-Drying of Foods: The Characteristic of the Process Course and the Effect of Its Parameters on the Physical Properties of Food Materials." Molecules, 2020. PMC7603155. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7603155/

5.     Ma Y, et al. "Effects of Drying Methods on Nutrient Retention in Animal Tissue." PMC5936978. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5936978/

6.     Kabeer S, et al. "Dehydration and the Preservation of Bioactive Compounds in Nutrient-Dense Foods." PMC9998808. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9998808/

7.     "Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) Review of Traditional and Modern Uses." Heliyon, 2023. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2023 (S2405844023100491) https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844023100491

8.     Medical News Today. "Slippery elm: Benefits, uses, and side effects." Reference resource on mucilage and digestive support. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/slippery-elm

9.     "Nutritional Interventions for Female Fertility." PubMed Central, PMC12343174. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12343174/

10.  "Organ Meat Nutrient Density and Bioavailability." PubMed Central, PMC11435426 and PMC11174546. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11435426/ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11174546/

Links Mentioned

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why are organ supplements better than isolated vitamins?

Organ meats like beef liver deliver essential nutrients in the matrix your body evolved to use, not as isolated compounds. A single serving of beef liver contains heme iron, preformed vitamin A, B12, folate, choline, copper, zinc, and selenium together with the cofactors needed for absorption. Isolated supplements deliver one nutrient at a time. Your body uses nutrients in synergy, so the whole-food matrix consistently outperforms stacked isolates for bioavailability.

Q: What is heme iron and why does it matter for women?

Heme iron is the form of iron found only in animal foods such as beef, liver, and shellfish. Your body absorbs heme iron at 15 to 35 percent. Non-heme iron from plants absorbs at 2 to 20 percent. For women who menstruate, are postpartum, are perimenopausal, or are depleted from years of subclinical iron loss, that absorption gap is significant. The Harvard School of Public Health nutrition source details this well.

Q: Are freeze-dried organ supplements better than heat-processed ones?

Yes. Freeze-drying preserves 90 to 97 percent of the original nutrient content in organ meat. Heat drying and cooking degrade B vitamins, oxidize fat-soluble vitamins like vitamin A, and break down delicate peptides. Freeze-drying removes water at a low temperature so the nutrient matrix stays intact. This is the form of organ supplementation that actually delivers what whole organ meat would deliver.

Q: Why are slippery elm and yarrow paired with beef organs?

Slippery elm contains mucilage, a soluble fiber that coats and calms the digestive tract, supporting nutrient absorption. Yarrow has antispasmodic activity documented across multiple recent reviews. Pairing these traditional botanicals with dense organ nutrition addresses the category's historical roughness on some women's stomachs, without diluting the nutrient density. Black pepper extract (BioPerine) further raises bioavailability.

Q: Do I still need a multivitamin if I take organ supplements?

Formula No. 06 consolidates several supplement jobs into one daily capsule: heme iron, bioavailable B12, choline, copper, zinc, retinol, and gut support. Many women find they can reduce or replace several supplements with a whole-food organ supplement plus a good omega-3. Your own needs depend on diet, lab values, and life stage. Always welcome to share the ingredient panel with your own practitioner.

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