usa weekend   
 

advertisements









Home Page
Site Index
Celebs
Health
Food
Personal Finance
Cartoon
Frame Games
Stickdoku
Trickledowns
Special Reports
Home & Family
Classroom
Talkin' Shop
Back Issues
Make A Difference Day
 
contact us
back issues
jobs

email


Issue Date: November 2, 2008
Other ThinkSmart articles this week:
Green Smart "Hybrid" your house
Eat Smart Add turmeric to your food
Travel Smart How to save on shipping luggage ahead
Bonus: Turmeric Cocktail
THINK SMART
Helpful tips for your everyday life

email

EatSmart

JEAN CARPER

Add turmeric to your food


Turmeric -- a yellow-orange spice -- contains a potent disease-fighting antioxidant.
Turmeric Cocktail
1/2 cup fruit juice, such as apple or pineapple
1 heaping Tb. turmeric
1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper (optional)
1 Tb. apple cider vinegar
1 Tb. fresh lemon juice
Stir all together. Drink once or twice a day.
Source: Swedish researcher Stig Bengmark, M.D., emeritus professor at Lund University

Exciting new research says that we should eat more turmeric, the yellow-orange spice used in Asian cooking and curries.

Turmeric contains curcumin, a powerful antioxidant dubbed "curecumin" by leading researcher Bharat Aggarwal of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. He says new studies show that curcumin may help prevent and treat cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, pulmonary disease, inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis and arthritis.

One reason: Curcumin is a potent anti-inflammatory agent, and inflammation is now regarded asan underlying contributor to many chronic diseases. Aggarwal also hasdiscovered that curcumin affects gene activity in ways that starve and kill cancer cells.

The National Cancer Institute is now funding human trials of curcumin related to the prevention and treatment of colon, pancreatic and rectal cancers. In addition, scientists at UCLA are testing curcumin on Alzheimer's patients.

To get more: Commercial curry powders that contain turmeric have low and widely variable concentrations of curcumin, so it's better to consume straight turmeric. You can add turmeric freely to many Asian, Indian and African dishes, such as rice, vegetables, chicken and fish curries, stir-frys, stews and casseroles.

It's safe: Researchers say up to 12 grams of pure curcumin a day is non-toxic; one tablespoon of turmeric might contain up to 1/4 gram of curcumin.

Scientific Sources for 11/2/2008 column
Curcumin's benefits
Biochem Pharmacol 2008, Feb. 15; 75:787-809 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17900536
Int J Biochem Cell Biol. 2008 Jul 9. [Epub ahead of print]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18662800
Human trials at NCI
http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials
Amounts and safety
Nutr Cancer, 2006:55(2): 126-31 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17044766


Want to know more about turmeric curcumin? Click here.


Copyright 2009 USA WEEKEND. All rights reserved.
A Gannett Co., Inc. property.
Terms of Service.   Privacy Policy/Your California Privacy Rights.