Free Food & Medicine in Your Backyard
Apr.18,2012This will blow your mind! Do you know many of the things that might help what ails us are growing in our own back yard???
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Apr.18,2012This will blow your mind! Do you know many of the things that might help what ails us are growing in our own back yard???
I was looking on the internet tonight and came across this neat YT Channel about a 93 year old lady who lived through the depression and is sharing her life and cooking with everyone. Thought you might be interested in it too.
(NaturalNews) There is another cancer preventing cruciferous vegetable that few know about. It is perfect for salads or pesto. Uncooked, the nutrients and enzymes are preserved. It’s a green called arugula. Arugula’s health benefits exceed most other greens. Unlike most cruciferous veggies, arugula tastes good raw. Preparing arugula is easy and explained near the end of this article.
Arugula Benefits
The dark green leaves let you know arugula is high in chlorophyll. Chlorophyll molecules are similar to red blood cells. A major difference is that iron atoms are in the centers of blood cell molecules, while plant chlorophyll centers contain magnesium atoms.
If you’ve read articles by Dr. Mark Sircus, you’ll know the importance of magnesium and its contribution to over 300 metabolic functions in the human body.
Cooking greens enough to cause them to slightly lose their bright green luster degrades their chlorophyll content. Fortunately, arugula is great in salads with dark green lettuce or in pesto. Intact chlorophyll helps prevent DNA and liver damage from aflatoxins, which sometimes appear in corn or corn products, peanuts and peanut products, and some tree nuts.
The elusive but important vitamin K family is found in arugula. Vitamin K2 is important for bone absorption of calcium. This obviously promotes bone health. But not so well understood is vitamin K’s contribution to cardiovascular health. Vitamin K also minimizes brain matter calcifications that often result in Alzheimer’s disease.
Most of the plaque that forms inside arterial wall surfaces is calcification from calcium that bones and teeth don’t absorb. Cholesterol is not the culprit. Vitamin K helps keep calcium from collecting in the bloodstream and other soft tissue.
Arugula is high in fiber, which aids digestive elimination. Vitamin B complex is rich in arugula with high amounts of folate, the natural source of folic acid. Arugula is high in vitamin C, A, and P. In addition to magnesium, iron and copper content is strong in arugula as well.
Additionally, the phytochemicals in arugula contain lots of sulfur compounds, which enable the body’s cells to detox further by helping the liver create more glutathione. Glutathione is the master antioxidant that is created by the liver if the right nutrient precursors are available.
It is difficult to find a more nutritious single plant food than arugula.
Let’s Eat!
Arugula seems to be appearing more and more in organic food stores. Ask around. The accent is on the U in arugula. Though sometimes cleaned and packaged, buying arugula in fresh bunches with their roots is optimum. Do your own cleaning. Arugula bunches resemble fresh spinach bunches.
Arugula should be eaten often to obtain and maintain its benefits. To make it easier, arugula tastes better uncooked than all other cruciferous veggies. Mixing arugula with other greens in salads are obvious easy choices.
Pesto is another tasty choice for consuming arugula raw with its nutrients intact. You can make a pesto using arugula combined with the traditional basil leaves and/or cilantro. Cilantro is recognized as a detoxifying agent, especially effective for eliminating mercury.
All pesto mixes include lots of leaves of your choice, a few pine nuts or walnuts, some fresh garlic cloves, sea salt, grated parmesan cheese(optional), and lots of cold pressed olive oil all blended in a food processor. When you get a thick, porous texture, apply the pesto to pasta or any other food, even sandwiches.
Whatever isn’t used can be sealed and refrigerated. A thin topping of olive oil inhibits oxidation. Here’s a recipe example to get you started. Substitute or include arugula/ cilantro with less or no basil.
http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/fresh_basil_pesto/
Sources for more information include:
Dr. Mark (not Sircus) video on sulfites in the cruciferous arugula
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NDs50eEOoMY
More on arugula health benefits
http://guide2herbalremedies.com/health-benefits-of-arugula/
Explaining chlorophyll
http://whfoods.org/genpage.php?tname=george&dbid=52
Nutritional content of arugula
http://www.nutrition-and-you.com/arugula.html
Cruciferous Vegetables – Crammed With Anticancer Power
http://breastcancer.about.com/od/cancerfightingfoods/a/crucifers.htm
Aflotoxins explained
About the author:
Paul Fassa is dedicated to warning others about the current corruption of food and medicine and guiding others toward a direction for better health with no restrictions on health freedom. You can visit his blog at http://healthmaven.blogspot.com
Reprinting/Sharing this article: Non-commercial use OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.
http://www.naturalnews.com/033604_arugula_superfood.html#ixzz1YMGQQhEu
(NaturalNews) Alternative food sources in a world of shrinking resources are those that offer a diverse profile in terms of availability, nutrition and other important uses. Some food plants grow well in marginal soil, offer high nutrition, and have medicinal uses that could make them high priority in years to come. Easy propagation, tolerance of diverse growing conditions, multiple uses of its products, and beneficial nutrition would be earmarks of life-saving food crops. Another food source already utilized in other countries is insects. An online search for nutritious foods yields results such as broccoli, kale, avocadoes, bee pollen and others equally well-known. While these all-stars undoubtedly have a place in the pantheon of nutritious foods, a few other candidates could nose them out.
Moringa oleifera, also known as horseradish or drumstick tree, is a miracle tree grown throughout the tropics that can nevertheless withstand frost and frozen soil. It propagates easily from stumps, seeds, direct sowing, cuttings or natural regeneration. It is drought-resistant and fast-growing. Its seeds, which have antibiotic properties, can purify water. Its edible leaves are very high in protein, and they have an amino acid ratio comparable to that found in meat, which is very rare in plants. The leaves contain four times the vitamin A found in carrots, seven times the vitamin C in oranges, and three fourths the iron in spinach. In fact, if there were no other food, a moringa tree alone could sustain life.
The yam bean, or jicama, is another vigorous performer. This tuberous legume releases abundant nitrogen into soil in which it is grown. It produces large yields even in poor soil and dry conditions, and it resists disease and insects. Delicious raw, it can be juiced, made into soup, or prepared as a salad. It can also be cooked, toasted, soaked, fried, pickled or fermented. Oil can be made from its seeds, and its leaves can be fed to animals. Typically grown in Mexico and Central America, it is known by various names. It contains high amounts of vitamin C. It needs a long growing season.
Finally, insects already constitute an alternative food source in countries such as Mexico, Central America, Korea and Africa. Grasshoppers or locusts are common fare, as are caterpillars and beetles. Insects contain protein, iron and sometimes calcium. Many are easy to grow, and they can be purchased at bait and pet shops. If nothing else, insects can be fed to chickens, increasing egg and meat yields.
http://moringa-miracletree.com/
http://www.ilovemoringa.com/uses.html
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1134/is_3_113/ai_n5990764/
http://www.ehow.com/how_7327247_raise-insects-chicken-feed.html
http://www.essortment.com/entomophagy-using-insects-food-source-22027.html
About the author:
M. Thornley enjoys walking, writing and pursuing a raw vegan diet and lifestyle.
Reprinting/Sharing this article: Non-commercial use OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.
http://www.naturalnews.com/032768_food_plants_nutrition.html#ixzz1Q401GquS
Jun.15,2011‘Robyn shares her personal story and how it inspired her current path as a “Real Food” evangelist. Grounded in a successful Wall Street career that was more interested in food as good business than good-for-you, this mother of four was shaken awake by the dangerous allergic reaction of one of her children to a “typical” breakfast. Her mission to unearth the cause revealed more about the food industry than she could stomach, and impelled her to share her findings with others. Informative and inspiring.’
About this speaker
‘Robyn authored “The Unhealthy Truth: How Our Food Is Making Us Sick and What We Can Do About It.” A former Wall Street food industry analyst, Robyn brings insight, compassion and detailed analysis to her research into the impact that the global food system is having on the health of our children. She founded allergykidsfoundation.org and was named by Forbes as one of “20 Inspiring Women to Follow on Twitter.” The New York Times has passionately described her as “Food’s Erin Brockovich.”‘
http://allergykidsfoundation.org
http://twitter.com/unhealthytruth
Many times canned goods will last longer than the expiration date posted on them.
What canned goods have the longest shelf life…