
Why Some Foods Never Really Fill You Up
06/17/2026The Gut Health Secret You’ve Probably Never Heard Of
You’ve probably heard that probiotics are good for your microbiome. You’ve probably also heard you should eat more wholesome, fiber-rich foods.
But have you ever stopped to wonder why?
Why do health experts keep talking about probiotics? Why is fiber so important? And what actually happens inside your body when you eat vegetables, beans, berries, oats, nuts, seeds, and other healthy plant foods?
It’s a remarkable chain reaction taking place inside your gut every day. That chain reaction creates a tiny compound called butyrate, and scientists now believe it plays an important role in maintaining a healthy gut lining, supporting digestion, and even helping regulate your natural appetite.
Most people have never heard of butyrate. But once you understand where it comes from, you’ll never think about fiber the same way again.
It all starts with the food on your plate.
Think of your gut as a thriving garden.
Inside your large intestine (colon) live trillions of microbes. Some support your health, while others are less helpful. Like any healthy garden, the microbes that flourish depend on what you feed them.
When you regularly eat fiber-rich foods, you’re feeding the beneficial microbes that help keep your gut healthy. The types of fiber found in these foods, especially soluble fiber and resistant starch, are called prebiotics because they nourish your probiotics, the good bacteria already living in your gut.
Here’s where the story gets interesting.
The chain reaction
As your gut bacteria digest certain types of fiber, they produce compounds called postbiotics. Think of postbiotics as the finished product of a healthy gut.
Among the most important postbiotics are compounds known as short-chain fatty acids, or SCFAs. There are three primary SCFAs: Acetate, Propionate, and Butyrate.
While all three play valuable roles, butyrate has become the superstar because researchers continue discovering just how important it is for your health.
Without enough fiber-rich foods, that chain reaction begins to slow. Over time, your gut becomes less diverse and produces fewer beneficial compounds like butyrate.
Why butyrate matters
One of butyrate’s biggest jobs is nourishing the cells that line your large intestine.
Those cells rely heavily on butyrate as their preferred source of energy. When they’re well nourished with fiber, they’re better able to maintain the protective lining of your digestive tract.
That lining has an important job. It allows nutrients from food to pass into your bloodstream while helping keep bacteria, toxins, and partially digested food inside your digestive tract until they can be safely eliminated.
Researchers believe this is one of the key reasons butyrate is so important for long-term gut health. But that’s only one part of the story.
Scientists have also found that butyrate supports a healthy gut environment by helping maintain a balanced immune response.
Perhaps most exciting is what researchers are learning about the connection between your gut and your brain.
You’ve probably heard a lot about GLP-1 because of medications like Ozempic and Wegovy. What many people don’t realize is that your body naturally produces GLP-1 every day. Research suggests butyrate supports the release of natural fullness hormones, including GLP-1 and PYY, making it an important player in your body’s natural appetite regulation.
When the chain reaction breaks
Imagine planting a beautiful garden but never watering it or adding nutrients to the soil.
Nothing dramatic happens overnight. But month after month, the garden becomes less healthy, less diverse, and less robust.
The same thing can happen inside your gut.
When your diet is low in fiber-rich foods, and high in refined carbs and sugar, your good gut bugs have less to eat. As they decline, they produce fewer postbiotics like butyrate.
Scientists are still learning exactly how all of these pieces work together, but one thing has become increasingly clear: healthy gut microbes need to be nourished if they’re going to keep producing the compounds that support your health.
Food first
As you can tell, your gut is a living ecosystem with countless natural interactions taking place every day.
That’s why the goal isn’t simply to take a probiotic or a butyrate supplement. It’s much more nuanced than that. The goal is to create the kind of gut environment where your body can naturally produce these important compounds every day, just as it was designed to do, by eating wholesome, fiber-rich foods.
Supplements have their place, but there’s no substitute for the remarkable chain reaction that begins with real food.
The bottom line
The next time you sit down to eat, remember this:
You’re not just feeding yourself.
You’re feeding an entire ecosystem that’s working around the clock to support your gut, your metabolism, your appetite, and your overall health.
That’s the real reason fiber is so good for you.
Want to take the next step? Watch my video, Why Probiotics Alone Won’t Fix Your Gut, to learn why your microbiome needs all three biotics to thrive.
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