Source - http://shine.yahoo.com/
By - Lylah M. Alphonse
Category - Hotel Reservations In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
![]() |
| Hotel Reservations In Miami |
Move
over, Acai berries and mangosteen. There's a less expensive,
easier-to-eat antioxidant in town, and it's a superfood that Native
Americans have known about for generations: Aronia berries.
Also on Shine: 7 Antioxidant Foods for Glowing Skin
"It's
got kind of an astringent taste to it. It's very naturally tart," Tammy
Ross, director of marketing for Westin Foods, told to Yahoo! Shine in
an interview. Westin Foods owns Mae's Health & Wellness, producers
of the Superberries line of aronia berry products. "It's very similar in
taste to a wine grape. What you're tasting in that tartness is actually
very good for you -- a type of an antioxidant and type of a compound
that can be found in wine and can also be found in tea."
Also on Shine: A Guide to the Best Antioxidants Out There
Aronia
berries contains a natural blend of polyphenolic antioxidants that
combat the cell-damaging free radicals created in our bodies by stress,
environmental pollution, medical x-rays, and other aspects of daily
living (even exercise!). Among those antioxidants are anthocyanins,
which have been shown to help fight diseases caused by oxidative stress
like certain types of cancer, cardiovascular disease, chronic
inflammation, and liver function, according to studies published by the
U.S. National Library of Medicine and elsewhere. According to the USDA,
Aronia berries have twice as much antioxidant power as cranberries and
four times as much as pomegranates, strawberries, goji berries, and
blueberries. (They're difficult to compare to chia seeds, another
popular antioxidant, because chia seeds aren't fruits)
Also
called chokeberries thanks to their super-tart taste, the dark-purple
clusters grow wild in North America and have recently been cultivated by
farmers in the Midwest. The distinctive berries grow on bushes, with
several round fruit clumped together on rosy-red stems.
Unlike
trendy acai berries, which are usually found mixed into other products
or in powdered supplement form, aronia berries are available as whole
fruit -- you can find them online at Amazon.com (about $10 per pound)
where they cost far less per serving than dried goji berries (about $18
per pound) and dried wild blueberries (about $48 per pound). Native
Americans used them as part of their diet, as preservatives for their
meat, and also for dying cloth, Ross explained. And it's become popular
in Europe, where they're now prized for their health and wellness
properties.
Aronia
berries aren't a dietary supplement, though -- they're a food. Like
elderberries or black currants, aronia berries can be used to make wine,
jam, syrups, and tea; you can stir them into fresh sauces or use them
along with blueberries in your breakfast muffins.

No comments:
Post a Comment