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Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw

Poultry Per 100 g · Per 100g serving

Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw is a poultry at 272 calories per 100g. It provides useful amounts of Niacin (B3) and Vitamin A (RAE), contributing 29% and 27% of the Daily Value per 100g. This poultry is a moderate protein source. Poultry provides lean, complete protein along with B vitamins and minerals. The nutrient profile differs substantially between light and dark meat, and between skin-on and skinless preparations. Our database tracks 64 nutrients for this food, plus insulin index, environmental footprint data.

272
Calories
kcal
11.4
Protein
g
24.7
Fat
g
0
Carbs
g
0
Fiber
g

Top Nutrients

☀️
Niacin (B3)
4.6 mg
29% DV
☀️
Vitamin A (RAE)
245 µg
27% DV
Linoleic Acid (18:2)
4.5 g
26% DV

Data for 64 of 150 tracked nutrients

Nutrient Fingerprint

How this food scores across key nutrient categories, as a percentage of the daily recommended value per 100 g. Based on USDA DRIs for adults.

Complete Nutrient Profile

Macronutrients 8
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Water SR62.7g
2%
Calories SR272kcal
Energy (kJ) SR1,138kj
Protein SR11.4g
20%
Total Fat SR24.7g
Carbohydrate SR0g
Fiber SR0g
Ash SR0.96g
Minerals 10
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Calcium SR138mg
14%
Iron SR1.6mg
20%
Magnesium SR12.0mg
3%
Phosphorus SR132mg
19%
Potassium SR104mg
3%
Sodium SR40.0mg
3%
Zinc SR1.3mg
12%
Copper SR0.07mg
7%
Manganese SR0.02mg
1%
Selenium SR10.7µg
20%
Vitamins 14
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Vitamin A (RAE) SR245µg
27%
Vitamin A (IU) SR74.0IU
Retinol SR74.0µg
Vitamin C SR1.5mg
2%
Thiamin (B1) SR0.05mg
4%
Riboflavin (B2) SR0.13mg
10%
Niacin (B3) SR4.6mg
29%
Pantothenic Acid (B5) SR0.82mg
16%
Vitamin B6 SR0.19mg
15%
Folate SR6.0µg
2%
Folic Acid SR0µg
Folate (food) SR6.0µg
Folate (DFE) SR6.0µg
Vitamin B12 SR0.25µg
10%
Fatty Acids 7
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Saturated Fat SR7.5g
Monounsaturated Fat SR10.4g
Polyunsaturated Fat SR5.0g
Cholesterol SR130mg
Omega-3 EPA SR0.02g
Omega-3 DPA SR0g
Omega-3 DHA SR0.02g
Individual Fatty Acids 7
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Capric Acid (10:0) SR0g
Lauric Acid (12:0) SR0g
Myristic Acid (14:0) SR0.26g
Palmitic Acid (16:0) SR5.3g
Stearic Acid (18:0) SR1.8g
Linoleic Acid (18:2) SR4.5g
26%
Linolenic Acid (18:3) SR0.34g
Amino Acids 18
NutrientPer 100gUnitPer Serving% DV
Tryptophan SR0.09g
Threonine SR0.51g
Isoleucine SR0.40g
Leucine SR0.90g
Lysine SR0.96g
Methionine SR0.30g
Cystine SR0.12g
Phenylalanine SR0.45g
Tyrosine SR0.34g
Valine SR0.47g
Arginine SR0.79g
Histidine SR0.32g
Alanine SR0.80g
Aspartic Acid SR1.2g
Glutamic Acid SR1.8g
Glycine SR0.90g
Proline SR0.61g
Serine SR0.54g

Nutrient Density Score

The NRF9.3 score measures overall nutritional quality per 100 kcal. It rewards 9 nutrients to encourage (protein, fiber, vitamins A, C, E, calcium, iron, magnesium, potassium) and penalizes 3 to limit (saturated fat, added sugars, sodium). Higher is better; negative scores indicate the food is high in limit nutrients relative to its beneficial content.

14
NRF9.3 Score
Moderate · per 100 kcal
Poor (<0) Moderate Good Excellent (100+)

NRF9.3 index: Fulgoni et al. (2009), J Nutr 139(8). DVs based on FDA 2020 reference values.

Nutrient Interactions in This Food

Nutrients in this food that enhance or compete with each other during absorption.

✔ Synergies — nutrients that help each other

Dietary Fat + Vitamin A●●●

Vitamin A is fat-soluble and requires dietary fat for absorption. Adding fat to a meal significantly increases beta-carotene and retinol absorption.

Ribaya-Mercado et al., Am J Clin Nutr, 2007

Protein + Calcium●●

Moderate protein intake enhances calcium absorption and supports bone health. The acid-ash hypothesis suggesting protein harms bones has been largely disproven.

Kerstetter et al., J Clin Endocrinol Metab, 2005

⚠ Antagonisms — nutrients that compete

Calcium vs Iron●●●

Calcium inhibits both heme and non-heme iron absorption when consumed in the same meal. The effect is dose-dependent, with significant inhibition at 300+ mg calcium.

Hallberg et al., Am J Clin Nutr, 1991

Zinc vs Copper●●●

High zinc intake induces metallothionein in enterocytes, which traps copper and blocks its absorption. Prolonged high-dose zinc can cause copper deficiency.

Prasad et al., JAMA, 1978; Fosmire, Am J Clin Nutr, 1990

Zinc vs Iron●●

Zinc and non-heme iron compete for the same intestinal transporter (DMT1). High doses of one can reduce absorption of the other when taken simultaneously.

Rossander-Hulten et al., Am J Clin Nutr, 1991

Calcium vs Zinc●●

High calcium intake may modestly reduce zinc absorption, though the effect is smaller than calcium's impact on iron. Phytate amplifies this interaction.

Wood & Zheng, Am J Clin Nutr, 1997

Amino Acid Profile

Essential amino acid composition compared to the WHO/FAO adult reference pattern. The Amino Acid Score indicates protein quality — 100 means all essential amino acid requirements are met.

106
Amino Acid Score
Complete
Valine
Lowest Scoring
18
Amino Acids Tracked

✓ Complete protein — all essential amino acids meet or exceed WHO reference levels.

All Amino Acids (18)
Amino Acidg / 100gmg / g protein
Tryptophan0.098.0
Threonine0.5144.7
Isoleucine0.4035.4
Leucine0.9079.3
Lysine0.9684.7
Methionine0.3026.6
Cystine0.1210.1
Phenylalanine0.4539.7
Tyrosine0.3430.2
Valine0.4741.4
Arginine0.7969.0
Histidine0.3228.0
Alanine0.8069.8
Aspartic Acid1.2102.3
Glutamic Acid1.8159.6
Glycine0.9079.3
Proline0.6153.5
Serine0.5447.1

Fatty Acid Profile

Breakdown of fat types per 100g. A healthy fat profile favours unsaturated fats (mono + poly) and a balanced omega-3 to omega-6 ratio.

7.5g
Saturated
10.4g
Monounsaturated
5.0g
Polyunsaturated
1:112.0
Omega-3 : Omega-6 Ratio
Omega-6 dominant — ideal range is 1:1 to 1:4
Omega Fatty Acids
EPA (20:5 n-3)0.02 g
DHA (22:6 n-3)0.02 g
Linoleic acid (18:2 n-6)4.5 g

How Cooking Changes Nutrients

Estimated percentage of each nutrient retained after cooking, based on USDA retention factors for the “Chicken” food category. Values of 100% mean no loss; lower values indicate nutrients lost to heat, water, or oxidation.

Key insights
Vitamin B6 loses up to 42% when simmered. Roasted retains 80%.

Source: USDA Table of Nutrient Retention Factors, Release 6 (2007). Retention values are category-level averages — actual retention depends on cooking time, temperature, and water volume.

USDA Retention Factors

Insulin Response

The Insulin Index (II) measures the actual insulin response to food on a scale where white bread = 100. Unlike the Glycemic Index (which only measures blood sugar), the II captures the full hormonal response — including the effect of protein and fat on insulin secretion. This is why high-protein foods like meat and dairy can have significant insulin scores despite having low or zero GI values.

14
Insulin Index
Low Insulin Response
Insulin Index Scale 14
0 Low ≤30 Mod ≤60 High ≤100 120
Macro Model ●● Estimated from macronutrient composition (R²=0.49)

Source: Holt et al. 1997; Bao et al. 2016; Bell 2014

Environmental Impact

Environmental footprint per kilogram of food produced. Data represents the global average for the “Poultry Meat” category.

9.9
kg CO₂e / kg
High Impact
12.2
m² land / kg
Land Use
660
L water / kg
Water Use
65.6
g SO₂e / kg
Acidification
How this compares (GHG emissions)
Potatoes (0.5)Chicken (9.9)Beef (99.5)
Greenhouse Gas Emissions9.9 kg CO₂e / kg
Land Use12.2 m² / kg
Water Use660 L / kg
Eutrophication48.7 g PO₄e / kg
Acidification65.6 g SO₂e / kg
⚠️ Important context about this data
  • Global averages: These figures are production-weighted averages from a meta-analysis of ~38,700 farms across 119 countries (Poore & Nemecek, 2018). Actual impact varies enormously by farming method, geography, and supply chain.
  • System boundary: Cradle-to-retail only — does not include consumer transport, home cooking energy, or food waste.
  • Soil carbon not included: This data does not account for soil carbon sequestration. Some argue that well-managed regenerative grazing partially offsets ruminant emissions; however, full lifecycle accounting — including methane, land-use change, and the opportunity cost of using land for grazing vs. reforestation — typically makes the net footprint of ruminant meat higher, not lower. This is especially relevant in temperate grassland regions like Ireland.
  • Not gospel: This data is informational and illustrative. It is useful for understanding relative magnitudes, but should not be treated as precise measurements for any individual product or farm.

Source: Poore & Nemecek (2018), Science 360(6392). Meta-analysis of ~38,700 farms, 119 countries, 46 product categories.

Global Supply: Meat

Top 10 countries by per capita supply of the “Meat” food group (kcal/capita/day, 2023). This is food group–level data from FAO Food Balance Sheets, not specific to this individual food.

1.
Tonga
755
2.
Mongolia
643
3.
Argentina
571
4.
China; Macao SAR
546
5.
Marshall Islands
539
6.
Ireland
532
7.
Bahamas
527
8.
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
516
9.
Nauru
510
10.
Belarus
498

Global Supply Trend (1961–2023)

+56%
1961: 156 kcal2023: 244 kcal

Source: FAO Food Balance Sheets (2023). Supply = production + imports − exports − waste, converted to kcal/capita/day.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories are in Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw?

Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw contains 272 kcal per 100 grams, making it a calorie-dense food. The energy comes from 11.4g of protein (17% of calories), 24.7g of fat (82%), and 0g of carbohydrates (0%). Fat is the primary energy source.

What is Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw most nutritious for?

The standout nutrient in Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw is Niacin (B3), providing 4.6 mg per 100g (29% of the Daily Value). It is also a notable source of Vitamin A (RAE) (27% DV). Our database tracks 64 individual nutrients for this food, allowing detailed comparison across vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and fatty acids.

Is Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw high in protein?

Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw provides 11.4g of protein per 100 grams — a moderate amount. Protein contributes 17% of its calories.

How much fiber is in Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw?

Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw contains no dietary fiber. This is typical for animal-derived food. Pair with plant-based foods to ensure adequate fiber intake.

What is the insulin index of Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw?

Poultry, mechanically deboned, from backs and necks with skin, raw has a low insulin response (II: 14) (estimated from macronutrient composition) on the insulin index scale (white bread = 100). This means it triggers relatively little insulin secretion, which may be relevant for those managing insulin sensitivity or following low-insulin dietary strategies. Note that the insulin index can differ substantially from the glycemic index — dairy products and high-protein foods often have higher insulin responses than their GI would suggest.