Berried treasure

Pamela Allardice
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
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Berried treasure
Strawberries supply potassium, which regulates blood pressure, and may help blood vessels relax...
Pamela Allardice
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HealthFood

These pretty berries are so good for you, they are nudging out pomegranate and goji for 'superfruit' status, says Pamela Allardice.

Love your heart. It seems a spoonful of strawberries makes the cholesterol go down. According to a new study published in Metabolism, eating strawberries daily caused a significant reduction in LDL ('bad') cholesterol. Even better, the participants' LDL levels were less prone to oxidation, the chemical process that really damages your heart and arteries. Another study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed that a high intake of strawberries lowered both total and LDL cholesterol in both sexes. The berry-rich diet produced a 3.5 per cent reduction in total cholesterol in women and 2.6 per cent for men; the figures were similar for LDL cholesterol, at 3.2 and 3.1 per cent, respectively.

Strawberries also supply potassium, which regulates blood pressure, and may help blood vessels relax in people with hardening of the arteries; plus they have some power to protect brain cells against the damage that occurs with stroke.

Fight cancer. Along with heaps of vitamin C (gram for gram, strawberries contain more than oranges), fibre and folate, strawberries have particular disease-fighting antioxidants that few other fruits have, called anthocyanins: these are the plant chemicals that give strawberries their gorgeous ruby-red colour. Anthocyanins reduce inflammation (which is a major symptom in many chronic diseases, including cancer), provide powerful anti-ageing properties that protect and repair cells from unstable oxygen molecules called free radicals, curb the spread of cancer cells, and reduce tumour growth. In test-tube experiments, strawberry compounds have been shown to interfere with the development of human leukaemia, lung, breast, and prostate cancers.

Two other strawberry-specific antioxidants, ellagitannins and lupeol, are effective anti-inflammatories and anti-carcinogens, especially against colon and cervical cancers. A study in Cancer Research has also shown that eating strawberries, along with other fruits, including raspberries, restored 20 per cent of carcinogen-damaged genes to normal. Other research suggests they could possibly increase cancer cells’ susceptibility to anti-cancer drugs.

Keep your eyes on the prize. Eating foods that are low on the Glycaemic Index (GI) is more than just a smart way to maintain your weight. A study from the Human Nutrition Research Center on Ageing at Tufts University in Boston, USA, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, shows that a low-GI diet also reduces the risk of age-related macular degeneration (MD) by 17 per cent, due to the high antioxidant content of low-GI foods. And you can’t get much lower GI than strawberries: their tiny carbohydrate content means you can enjoy them by the bowlful, and they will have almost zero impact on blood glucose, making them a delight for diabetics, too.

YOUR SAY: How do you enjoy berries in your diet? Tell us below.

User comments
i love strawberries, just natural,or ewith cream or ice cream,on top of my trifles,anyway at allo i just love them
Just love them and have been enjoying them for years. This just backs up what I always thought of them. A treat with no guilt.
there is a berry ten times better than the strawberry and it is the acai berry pronounced ( ah- see- i) the properties of this fruit are incrediable and you will only find out how good it is is buy trying it give it a go.
Give this tasty strawberry spinach salad a try. Great at bbq's in the summer time. Yum!! * 2 bunches spinach, rinsed and torn into bite-size pieces (I use baby spinach) * 4 cups sliced strawberries * 1,2 cup vegetable oil * 1,4 cup white wine vinegar * 1,4 cup white sugar * 1,4 teaspoon paprika * 2 tablespoons sesame seeds * 1 tablespoon poppy seeds 1. In a large bowl, toss together the spinach and strawberries. 2. In a medium bowl, whisk together the oil, vinegar, sugar, paprika, sesame seeds, and poppy seeds. Pour over the spinach and strawberries, and toss to coat. recipe by, Jerry Lynne
I hate strawberries. What is the next best thing?
Zill could be right in respect of market shelf cleanliness - my concern is the loss of goodness the berry may suffer from picking to actually being presented on the supermarket shelf,do we have a measure on this ? and is it true that the large strawberries which seem to flood the supermarket shelves contain less goodness than the small. I would appreciate expert views on this
We've known about anthocyanins for a while and have explored their content in tropical fuits we grow. We believe they are great, and eating them (from our grumichamas and jaboticabas) caused gout one of us was suffering, to disappear. GO anthocyanins!!!!
Strawberries, with ground black pepper, mango or passionfruit nectar and for the adults, a little cointreau for that special occasion.
I slice a punnet of strawberries, sprinkle with balsamic vinegar, some sugar, let them steep at room temperature for a couple of hours then serve with whipped cream. Yum! Make strawberry shortcake served warm. Try watermelon, sliced strawberries, mint and red onion, raspberry vinaigrete served as a salad. Instant breakfast = blend strawberries, honey, skim milk, small spoonful of rolled oats.
Don't forget to wash them!!! Strawberries are one of the worst foods for having pesticides on them

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