 A regular reliable source of vitamin B12 is critical for anyone eating a plant-based diet, either vitamin B12 supplements or vitamin B12 fortified foods. I've talked about my B12 supplement recommendations, either 50 micrograms a day or once a week doses of 2,000 micrograms. I think that's the simplest, cheapest way, taking it once a week. That's how I'd do it. But if you don't want to take supplements, you'd have to rely on B12 fortified foods, in which case you'd have to eat three separate servings of B12 fortified foods, each ideally containing at least 190% of the so-called daily value on the product's nutrition facts level. How does that make any sense? And what's the term daily value even mean? The term daily value is used to designate to both the DRV daily reference values and the RDI reference daily intakes that are based on the recommended daily allowances all to limit consumer confusion. See, aren't you less confused now? Anyway, the daily value of B12 was set at 6, which has recently changed to 2.4 in 2020, making it all the more confusing. And so 190% of 2.4 is about 4.5. Plug that into the equation I detailed in the last video, and you get about 1.16 absorbed from each serving times three times a day, and poof, there's your 3.5 for the day. Okay, so how much nutritional yeast would that be, a commonly B12 fortified food source? It depends on the brand. Going alphabetically, Bob's Red Mill brand has 730% per quarter cup, so you'd only need about four times less than that to make up a serving so around one tablespoon. So one tablespoon of this brand sprinkled on each meal and your B12 would be taken care of. Braggs says it's even more potent at 563% per tablespoon, so just a teaspoon three times a day should suffice. Dr. Ferman's brand is explicitly unfortified, so it contains zero B12, so that's an important lesson, where you can't just assume nutritional yeast has B12. So you like finding the bulk section? I mean you have no idea what it contains unless you actually see the package. Same with the Frontier Co-op brand zero B12. Cal brand has 500% of the daily value of B12 per three rounded tablespoons, so one rounded tablespoon should suffice as one of the servings. Now brand has more, with two teaspoons sufficing. Red Star has 333% per one and a half heaping tablespoons, so a serving would be like one tablespoon, but not only some of Red Star's nutritional yeast varieties have any B12 at all, so just remember to check the label. Finally, Trader Joe's looks like 1.5 tablespoons could count as one serving, so it looks like Braggs is the most potent currently available. There are all sorts of other B12 fortified foods, from plant-based meats and milks to breakfast cereals and energy drinks, but are there other green light sources, meaning plant foods from which nothing bad has been added or nothing good has been taken away? What about various algae-type products like Spirulina, which are advertised as natural vitamin B12 sources? Not only do they not actually contain B12 that's usable for humans, it's even worse than that. They may contain B12 analogs, lookalike molecules that can even block your absorption of real B12. I was excited to see that there was an herbal tea with B12, but so little you'd have to like quadruple bag it. If you didn't want to take a pill, which again, I think is really the best way. The easiest option would probably be leaf-side foods. I've always loved them because they center their ingredients around my daily dozen. Unfortunately, people see them citing my science and think I have some sort of financial relationship, but of course I have no financial ties to any food company, drug company, supplements, kitchen gadgets, no personal financial ties with any commercial entity whatsoever. Ever. I'm happy to voluntarily plug leaf-side. Though as their food has kept me from starving on the road on many occasions, they're freeze-dried, so they're light and easy to travel with, and I just use my hotel room coffee maker to make hot water and poof. Okay, but anyway, each of their meals has 75 micrograms of B12, so one a day and you get all your B12 without having to take a supplement, but it's only 100% green light if you specify you want the salt-free versions. They have no added salt, fat, sugar versions of all their products at no extra cost, but you have to specify that when you order. Notes you have to throw all these recommendations out the window for anyone over age 65 and go straight to high daily supplement doses, which I'll cover in my next video, as well as my recommendations during pregnancy, breastfeeding, infancy, and childhood.