What are super foods?

Superfoods are not just good foods, they are medicines. But more than that: they are all incredibly tasty and satisfying to eat! The foods in this book have been shown to prevent major diseases and even cure a few. They can be eaten to keep you healthy or to take you on a journey back to health. Could it be easier? With food alone you can maintain yourself free from drugs and return to natural health.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Let food be thy medicine

Food is medicine. We all know that we need to eat good food, but few of us realise just how potent truly good food is at both preventing and curing disease.

Superfoods seem to have a few things in common. They often have:
  • very strong colours
  • very strong and often bitter flavours, and 
  • the ability to survive in hostile environments.
They are tough.

Nutriments - the "building blocks of life"
We all know that there is a range of essential nutrients that our bodies must have in order to build and repair cells. These are the proteins, vitamins, minerals, fats and carbohydrates. I will call these the "building blocks". Whilst there is some debate as to which of these is the most important and how they should be balanced, everyone agrees we must have them.

Phytochemicals - the "healing factors" of life
Along with producing the "building blocks" of life, plants also produce a range of other chemicals that are regarded as non-essential for human health. These are the phytochemicals, hormones and enzymes they produce to:
  • protect themselves from the sun
  • protect themselves from parasites, fungus's, bugs and predators of all descriptions, and 
  • help them neutralise toxins in soils that would otherwise poison them. 
These may be more important that we think. When we eat these chemicals we may inherit that protection.

Colour and flavour
Many of these phytochemicals are also colour pigments. They give foods their strong vibrant colours and strong, often bitter flavours. Strong colours and bitter flavours indicate the presence of these "healing factor" chemicals that make up part of the survival mechanism of the plant.

Turmeric (image from Wikipedia)
We are learning that although these pigments are not part of the building blocks of the human body, they are nonetheless absolutely essential to our own survival systems. They help us recover if anything goes wrong.

Pigments like the curcurmin in turmeric, anthocyanins in red berries, carotenes in carrots, lycopene in tomatoes, betalains in beetroot, all help us manage "unwelcome guests" in our bodies, ranging from viruses to parasites through to chemicals, heavy metals, radiation toxicity and just too much sun!

Wild grown
However, it is these very pigments that we have been breeding out of modern foods.

The second theme that emerged while I was researching superfoods relates to the plant's level of "wildness". Superfoods tend to be from plants that have not been highly bred. These are plants that self-seed or spread with gay abandon no matter what we do to them, and that grow true from their own seeds. Dandelions are a superfood, and as anyone with a lawn knows, they can survive just about anything.  Coriander is a superfood, and if you have ever grown it you know that you plant your first crop, allow one plant to go to seed, and you will have coriander all over your garden next year. These plants are really hardy with very powerful self-protection capabilities, and these are the very plants that seem to help us become really hardy and give us very powerful self-protection capabilities.

My growing suspicion was confirmed when I came across an article by a group in New Zealand researching heritage apples. All apples are not equal. This study has shown some interesting differences between heritage apples and modern apples. You can read more at https://heritagefoodcrops.org.nz/montys-surprise, or watch a video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiLWjJk9Xk8.
Monty's Surprise

One heritage apple is Monty's Surprise. The article tells us that Monty's Surprise has 3.4 times the amount of phenolics in the skin and 5.9 times the amount in the flesh compared to a domestic supermarket apple. One Monty's Surprise is worth four supermarket apples!

They go on to state that even roadside apples that have grown from a discarded apple core, whilst not growing true to the parent apple, are still found to have these higher nutritional levels. This site has some excellent information on apples as an anti-cancer food, and the owners are doing extensive work on preserving heritage foods.

Future research
There is some independent medical research into phytochemicals, but it is patchy at best. Of the 5000 or more phytochemicals we know about very few of them.
  • We know about the bright red betalains in beetroot and we know that these seem to be good for the liver. 
  • We know about the yellows, oranges and scarlet reds found in marigolds, carrots and tomatoes, and we are learning that these carotenes are good for sun induced diseases, particularly those of the eyes such as macular degeneration and cataracts. 
  • We know about the anthocyanins found in all the purple coloured plants, and there is a long tradition of using these in the treatment various cancers. 
  • Recently we have learned about another red, resveratrol, a pigment found on the skins of grapes to protect the grape against fungus. It is showing a lot of promise for cardiovascular health.
This is just the tip of the iceberg. Stay tuned, there is a lot more to come. Until we do know more, there is one key we should apply to our diet. We should eat the maximum possible variety of strong coloured and strong flavoured food, as wild grown and wild seeded as possible, so that we are covering all our bases.

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