Food database · Vegetables

Fiber content

Fiber in Collards, Fresh, cooked with Butter or Margarine

A 1 cup serving of collards, fresh, cooked with butter or margarine contains 5.7 g of dietary fibera good source of fiber, about 20% of a 28 g daily target.

5.7 g
per 1 cup

Fiber breakdown

Soluble 1.4 g (25%)Insoluble 4.3 g (75%)
Serving1 cup
Total fiber5.7 g
Soluble fiber1.4 g
Insoluble fiber4.3 g
Share of 28 g daily target20%
CategoryVegetables
Food typeWhole food
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How much fiber is in collards, fresh, cooked with butter or margarine?

Collards, Fresh, cooked with Butter or Margarine delivers 5.7 grams of dietary fiber in a typical 1 cup serving, which makes it a good source of fiber. That covers roughly 20% of a 28 gram daily reference intake, so it can make a real dent in your fiber goal for the day.

Of that total, about 1.4 g is soluble fiber (which forms a gel in the gut and helps with cholesterol and blood-sugar) and 4.3 g is insoluble fiber (which adds bulk and supports regularity).

USDA FoodData Central FNDDS 2021-2023; FDC ID 2709583; total dietary fiber nutrient 1079. Total fiber is from USDA FNDDS; soluble and insoluble grams are category-based estimates, not lab-measured values.

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