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Help Heal Your Gut With These Probiotic Packed Meal Ideas

They're surprisingly easy, and delicious.

Gut health is still a strong priority in 2017, with more and more research cementing the link between gut health and immune health, mental health, weight, digestion, diabetes and more.

We all know you're supposed to eat yoghurt and sauerkraut, but not everyone knows how to include these into meals -- and make them taste amazing.

"Probiotics are microorganisms that are essential for the health of our gut bacteria," nutritionist Steph Lowe, aka The Natural Nutritionist, told The Huffington Post Australia.

"Gut bacteria assist in food breakdown, help produce essential nutrients and allow for greater nutrient bioavailability (via pre-digestion)."

With around 70 percent of our immune system located in the gut, probiotics are essential for optimal immune health.

"Without the right balance, nutrient production, absorption, digestion and assimilation is sub-optimal," Lowe said.

"This has powerful implications for health and vitality -- immunity and protection from food allergies and intolerances, cognition, memory and overall brain health, natural detoxification pathways, growth in children and adolescents, exercise performance and recovery, and our fat loss ability."

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Here are nine probiotic packed meals that can help boost your gut health.

1. Sourdough topped with yoghurt, fruit and honey

Thanks to the wild yeast in sourdough starter, sourdough bread contains the bacteria Lactobacillus in a higher amount than in other breads. Yoghurt is another probiotic rich food, so why not put the two together?

Simply toast some sourdough bread and top with natural or Greek yoghurt, your favourite seasonal fruit and a drizzle of honey.

Honey gives you the added bonus of a prebiotic.
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Honey gives you the added bonus of a prebiotic.

2. Miso soup topped with kimchi

Your favourite soup to have with sushi is actually great for your gut, with miso being a fermented paste made from soybeans, sea salt and koji (a mould starter) and often rice, barley or other grains. High quality miso can take up to three years to ferment, producing a gut friendly and enzyme-rich food.

Kimchi is another great probiotic. This traditional Korean dish consists of fermented vegetables (usually napa cabbage and daikon radish) and a flavour-packed paste of red chilli, garlic, ginger and sugar.

To get the most out of these probiotic foods, make a miso soup with veggies, noodles and tofu, and top with kimchi.

Add your favourite veggies and herbs.
Getty Images/Westend61
Add your favourite veggies and herbs.

3. Yoghurt with granola and berries

If you have this brekkie on the regular, kudos to you. Yoghurt is a fermented milk product which is soured and thickened by adding specific lactic acid-producing cultures to milk, making it a great probiotic.

Try layering natural, Greek or coconut yoghurt with granola and fruit to make this probiotic food extra delicious.

Perfect for breakfast or dessert.
Mateusz Gzik via Getty Images
Perfect for breakfast or dessert.

4. Bone broth with vegetables and sauerkraut

It sounds peculiar, but bone broth is simply stock made from simmering bones, just like you would with leftover chicken carcasses, fish or veggies. Bones contain gelatin, which can help restore the gut lining and the growth of probiotics (good bacteria) in the gut.

Try turning your bone broth into a hearty, warming soup by adding vegetables and topping with probiotic rich sauerkraut. Double whammy.

mikafotostok via Getty Images

5. Rainbow salad with a miso tahini dressing

Transform your boring salad with probiotic miso paste made into a flavoursome salad dressing. Simply mix tahini, miso, lemon juice and cracked pepper, and drizzle all over your salad.

Add hearty roast veggies to your salad, as well as sliced fruit for sweetness.
Evi Oravecz / Green Evi via Getty Images
Add hearty roast veggies to your salad, as well as sliced fruit for sweetness.

6. Kombucha with fresh lemon and berries

Kombucha is a fizzy, slightly sweet drink made by fermenting sugary tea with a culture of yeast and bacteria. It doesn't sound all that appealing, but once you add flavours, kombucha tastes amazing.

You can buy kombucha from supermarkets and health food stores, or make it yourself at home. Either way, when you're ready to drink, add fresh lemon slices and berries.

Getty Images/Picture Press RM

7. Sourdough topped with avocado and miso tahini

Combine probiotic sourdough and miso with this tasty avocado toast. Just like salt does, miso complements and enhances the flavour of the creamy avocado and sourdough, while the tahini adds earthiness and nuttiness.

AlexPro9500 via Getty Images

8. Tempeh burger with pickles and sauerkraut

Like tofu, tempeh is made from soybeans, yet is less processed. This fermented soy product is not only high in protein and B vitamins, but it's also a rich source of probiotics.

If you're new to tempeh, try these tempeh and black bean burgers. To top it all off and up the probiotics, add pickles and sauerkraut to your burger.

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9. Kefir berry smoothie

Kefir is a yoghurt-like drink, which is known as 'yoghurt on steroids' as it contains 30 strains of gut friendly bacteria and yeasts. For those just starting to drink kefir, a delicious way to ease yourself in is with a smoothie made with kefir.

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