All Access — The Complete Collection
Module 1: Welcome to Roe's Gratitude
The Sacred Foundation
The Seven Sacred Teas
Ritual Practice and Integration
Advanced Tea Wisdom
Your Financial Foundation
Life Insurance Demystified
Legacy Planning Essentials
Building Generational Wealth
Foundations of Ancestral Plant-Based Cooking
The Ancestral Foods Library
Meal Prep and Kitchen Systems
The Recipe Vault
Dark Leafy Greens — The Iron and Mineral Medicine
The most common concern I hear when people think about plant-based eating: ‘Where do you get your iron?’
The answer your great-grandmother would have given: from the greens. Every single day. Bitter leaf. Callaloo. Moringa. Collards. Amaranth greens. These are some of the most iron-dense foods on earth.
The Plant Iron Optimization Protocol
- 1. Pair with vitamin C: Vitamin C converts non-heme iron from its ferric to ferrous form, which absorbs more efficiently.
- 2. Avoid calcium-rich foods at the same meal: Calcium competes with iron for the same transport proteins.
- 3. Cook out the oxalates: Spinach and some greens are high in oxalic acid, which binds iron. Brief boiling and discarding the water removes most oxalates.
- 4. Cast iron cooking: Cooking acidic foods in a cast iron skillet transfers small but meaningful amounts of iron into the food.
The Greens Deep Dive
Callaloo: Iron content is comparable to or exceeding spinach. Calcium, potassium, and vitamin K at significant levels.
Bitter Leaf: The bitter compounds are sesquiterpene lactones and alkaloids with documented anti-inflammatory, antimalarial, and blood sugar-regulating properties.
Moringa Leaves: Added to soups in the last 2 to 3 minutes of cooking to preserve heat-sensitive compounds. Moringa powder can be stirred into sauces, soups, and grain dishes after removing from heat.
