@Ital you may find this useful (freely available, online): Kim S, Sung J, Foo M, Jin Y-S, Kim P-J (2015) Uncovering the Nutritional Landscape of Food. PLoS ONE 10(3): e0118697
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0118697
There's a lot in it, and it's not an easy read, but it does focus on raw foods, and on the interactions and correlations between different foods (instead of treating each in splendid isolation as if a chicken or person ate X and only X, which none naturally does). It concludes
"Nutritional fitness, which gauges the quality of a raw food according to its nutritional balance, appears to be widely dispersed over different foods, raising questions on the origins of such variations between foods. Remarkably, this nutritional balance of food does not solely depend on the characteristics of individual nutrients but is also structured by intimate correlations among multiple nutrients in their amounts across foods. This underscores the importance of nutrient-nutrient connections, which constitute the network structures embodying multiple levels of the nutritional compositions of foods".
edited to add, for Storm's benefit "An interesting question is whether foods with high NFs tend to be more expensive to purchase than foods with low NFs. Fig. 2C shows essentially no correlation between a food’s NF and price per weight (r = −0.02, P = 0.65; see also Fig. E in S1 Appendix)."
My economics arguments foccus on the differences in final price enjoyed by we as end consumers compared to the scale producers, not the individual ingredients specifically, since so many are focused on efforts to make feed at home to save money.