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SUPER APPLE
How would like like to make an apple a SUPER APPLE!!!???....NO I
don't mean GE or GMO...but an apple that will make you feel more energetic,
open respiratory, stimulate metabolism, increase stamina, impact immune system
to ward of free radicals...and above all else TASTE REALLY
GOOD!!!!! This
is what you do...get some wine....add blackberry ( or any of your favourite
berry ) blend in blender with a1/2 cup of wine. then when
blended pour into a bowl. Next take clove, cinnamon, ginger, and black pepper
put in 1/8 of a teaspoon of each and swirl in the wine berry mix. Next take a
apple....peel it unless you picked it yourself of a tree ( here where I live
you can do this ...but for any store bought apple I peel)slice into bit size
slices, add a teaspoon of aloe vera with this, mix well til all the apple
is covered and saturated with the mix....eat the effect is amazing...you will
feel circulation , body heat, breathing improves, circulation improves, pain
diminishes, energy and alertness is increased, antioxidant levels are through
the roof, anti cancer fighting levels are through the roof, repairing and
removing tissue is more effective, regular bowl movements can be a result as
well, intestinal health, anti parasitic, anti viral, can reverse pylori....and
this is all done with an Apple.. By the way you have just made your self an
Antioxidant, that if you bought a health food store would cost you 30.00$ and
you made it for yourself for about 1.50...do you think you could enjoy this and
call it a "Health Food" and you can give this to kids as well. Bon appetit
And remember..."An Apple a day can Keep the Medical cost Away"
APPLE Health
A
major review study published in the Nutrition Journal provides dozens of
reasons to enjoy an apple every day. A review study is one that looks at the
results of many other studies. This one included an analysis of 85 studies.
Apples were found to
be most consistently associated with a reduced risk of cancer, heart disease,
asthma, and type 2 diabetes when compared to other fruits and vegetables. In addition, eating apples was also
associated with increased lung function and increased weight loss.
Here
are some of the reasons why:
Apples
are a rich and very important source of phytonutrients, including flavonoids
and phenols, in the American diet and in Europe. In the United States, 22% of the phenolic compounds
consumed from fruits come from apples, making them the largest source of
phenols in the American diet. When compared to other fruits, apples ranked second in total
concentration of phenolic compounds, and perhaps more importantly, had the highest portion of free
phenols. Since free phenols are not bound to other compounds in the fruit, they
may be more available for absorption into the bloodstream. Apples are also an
excellent source of antioxidants, and when compared to many other commonly
consumed fruits in the United States, were found to have the second highest level of
antioxidant activity.
Many of the phytonutrients found in apples, including quercetin, catechin,
phloridzin and chlorogenic acid, are strong antioxidants. The total antioxidant
activity of 100 grams of whole apple (with the peel) was found to be equivalent to the
antioxidant effect of about 1500 mg of vitamin C. (However, the amount of vitamin C in 100 g of apples is only about
5.7 mg. Nearly all of the antioxidant activity
from apples comes from a variety of other compounds.) Whole apples, especially their peels,
have been found to have a number of powerful antioxidant effects, one of which
is to protect VLDL and LDL ("bad") cholesterol from oxidation. Yet
when quercitin, one of the most important antioxidant flavonoids in apples, was
tested by itself in laboratory animals, it had no protective effect. And when apple flesh and apple juice
were tested, they provided less than a tenth the benefit of whole apple.
Apples' protective effects against free radical damage to cholesterol reach
their peak at three hours following apple consumption and drop off after 24
hours, providing yet another good reason to eat a whole fresh apple a day. In
animal studies, apples have also been shown to lower LDL ("bad")
cholesterol while raising beneficial HDL cholesterol. Not only did the
laboratory animals in these studies produce less cholesterol, but they also
excreted more in their feces when fed apples, pears and peaches-but apples had the greatest
cholesterol-lowering effect. In the most recent studies, investigators found that the
combination of apple pectin and apple phenols lowered cholesterol and
triglycerides to a much greater extent than either apple pectin or phenols
alone. This again suggests a beneficial synergy between the many healthful
compounds found in apples and supports eating the whole fruit instead of simply
drinking apple juice, eating peel-free applesauce or taking fiber supplements. ~~~Apples have also been shown to greatly inhibit the growth
of liver and colon cancer cells in several studies. In one study, at a dose of
50 mg/mL, liver cancer cell proliferation was inhibited by 39% by extracts of
whole Fuji apple and 57% by whole Red Delicious extracts. In another study in
which colon cancer cells were treated with apple extracts, cell proliferation
was inhibited 43% at a dose of 50 mg/mL.
Promote Optimal Health
Eating
an apple a day may also offer significant protection against breast cancer,
suggests an animal study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
. When ~~~laboratory animals with breast cancer
were fed the human equivalent of 1, 3 or 6 apples a day for 6 months, their
tumors shrank by 25%, 25%, and 61%, respectively. Researchers credit apples' strong
protective action to the synergistic interactions among the wide variety of
potent antioxidant and antiproliferative phytonutrients, including phenolics
and flavonoids, they contain. In several large epidemiological (population)
studies conducted in the United Kingdom, Finland and the Netherlands, apple consumption (a minimum of 2 apples per
week) was found to be inversely linked with asthma and type 2 diabetes, and
positively associated with general lung health. Researchers attribute apples'
protective effects in these conditions to apples' high concentration of
anti-inflammatory flavonoids, such as quercitin and catechin. In addition to their beneficial
effects against chronic diseases ~~~including
cancer, cardiovascular disease, asthma and diabetes, apples may also help
combat cholera. Recently,
crude extracts from immature apples were found to inhibit cholera toxin in a dose dependent manner by
up to 98%.
Variation in Antioxidant Phytonutrients Among Different Types of
Apples
Researchers
have found distinct differences in total phenolic and flavonoid content among
different apple varieties: Of the four common varieties used for applesauce
(Rome Beauty, Idared, Cortland, and Golden Delicious), Rome Beauty had the highest phenolic
content. Out of 10 varieties commonly consumed in the U.S., Fuji apples
had the highest total phenolic and total flavonoid compounds, but Red Delicious apples were also quite
high. These apple
varieties also tended to have higher antioxidant activity. Apple phytonutrient
content is not greatly affected by storage. After 100 days, the amount of
phenolic compounds in the skin begins to decrease slightly, but even after 200 hundred days in
cold storage, the total amount of these compounds remains close to the level at
the time of harvest.
However, processing apples into juice greatly lowers their phytonutrient
content. Apple juice obtained from Jonagold apples by pulping and straight
pressing had only 10% of the antioxidant activity of fresh apples, while juice
obtained after pulp enzyming had only 3% of fresh apples' antioxidant activity.
The take home message: store apples in the refrigerator and enjoy a sweet,
crunchy, whole apple at least 2-3 times each week.
A Flavonoid Unique to Apples May Help Prevent Menopausal Bone
Loss
~~~A flavonoid found only in apples
called phloridzin may help prevent bone loss associated with menopause, suggests a study published in Calcified
Tissue International.. A side effect of the sex hormone changes that occur
during a woman's transition through menopause is a tendency towards increased inflammation and free
radical production, which in turn, promotes bone loss. Because of their
anti-inflammatory actions, polyphenols have been suggested as one means of
protecting against bone loss during this pro-inflammatory time in women's
lives. To test this theory, French researchers ovariectomized lab animals (to
simulate menopause) and divided them into two groups, which were given either a
control diet or a diet supplemented with phloridzin for 80 days. Three weeks
before the animals were sacrificed, 10 animals in each group were put into an
inflammatory state. While all the animals on the control diet lost bone, and
those in the inflammatory state lost even more bone, the rats receiving phloridzin not only did not
lose bone, but actually increased bone mineral density-even if they were
experiencing a high inflammatory state! If
you're moving through menopause, eating an apple a day may help you keep bone
loss at bay.
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