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Health & Wellness

20 Anti-Aging Herbs and Spices to Add to Your Diet Now

By Dr. Eric Braverman, Huffington Post. Posted December 24, 2008.


The typical American diet -- high in simple carbs and low in herbs and spices -- is aging us.
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Among other things, the holidays are a time of national dysnutrition: the disease of excess. Dysnutrition happens even in the most developed countries when food is plentiful but the overall diet is based on eating all the wrong balance of foods. Sound familiar? The typical American diet that is high in simple carbohydrates -- white flour, white salt, and processed food -- is aging us. We are getting all the bulk without the nutrients, plus adding to our propensity for developing real food cravings. So whether you are a vegetarian or an omnivore, you can start to reverse aging by simply choosing to eat the right foods to keep you full of vim, vigor, and vitality, especially over the holidays.

The easiest way to make sure you are getting more nutrients into every meal, even when you are grazing at the office cocktail party or the neighborhood potluck dinner is by choosing foods that are loaded with spices. Every time you flavor your meals with herbs or spices you are literally "upgrading" your food without adding a single calorie. You are taking something ordinary and turning it into something extraordinary by adding color, flavor, vitamins, and often medicinal properties. Here's why:

* Spices and herbs maximize nutrient density. Herbs and spices contain antioxidants, minerals and multivitamins. At the cocktail party, choose the Thai chicken satay stick over the tried and true fried chicken strip.

* Spices and herbs create a more thermogenic diet. Because spices are nutrient dense, they are thermogenic, which means they naturally increase your metabolism. As your metabolism revs higher you will burn more of the food you have already eaten as fuel, and store less as body fat. At the dinner party, finish off the meal with coffee or tea sprinkled with cinnamon, which contains dozens of nutrients.

* Some spices and herbs increase your overall feeling of fullness and satiety, so you'll eat less. One study conducted at Maanstricht University in the Netherlands showed that when one consumes an appetizer with half a teaspoon of red pepper flakes before each meal, it decreased their calorie intake by 10-16%. If you're planning a holiday menu, think of starting with a tomato soup sprinkled with red pepper.

* You can eliminate salt. When you flavor your foods with spices instead of salt you'll immediately see health and physical benefits. Excessive salt intake keeps water inside your body. Once you kick the habit you will no long have excessive bloating and water retention. You'll also lose the salt and salty snack craving. That's because using salt begets using more salt: after a while it's impossible to use just a pinch, because you've trained your brain to require a salty taste for everything you eat. Over time, using spices will also lessen your cravings for simple, nutrient poor carbohydrate snacks because you will not be yearning for a savory, salty taste. Stay clear of the chips and dips and you're doing your brain and your body big favor.

* Spices and herbs have real medicinal properties. Study after study shows the benefits of distinct herbs and spices. One study at Malmà University Hospital in Sweden showed that up to two hours after eating, people who ate cinnamon-spiced rice pudding measured significantly lower blood-glucose levels than those who had eaten the unspiced version. Other studies suggest that cinnamon may improve blood-glucose levels by increasing a person's insulin sensitivity. One 2003 trial of 60 people with type 2 diabetes reported that consuming as little as two teaspoons of cinnamon daily for six weeks reduced blood-glucose levels significantly. It also improved blood cholesterol and triglyceride levels, perhaps because insulin plays a key role in regulating fats in the body. So if you start adding spices to your diet now, you might be able to see real health benefits in the early months of the New Year.

Every little bit counts, so spice it up! Change your eating habits now, especially if your next meal is a pile of franks 'n blanks or cheeseburger sliders. Choose flavor over blandness every time, and try to incorporate these specific herbs and spices into your diet if you have the following health concerns:

* rosemary and basil for their anti-inflammatory power

* cumin and sage for their dementia-fighting power

* cayenne and cinnamon for their obesity-fighting power

* coriander and cinnamon for their sugar regulating powers

* lemon grass, nutmeg, bay leaves and saffron for their calming effects on your mood

* turmeric for its cancer fighting power

* oregano for its fungus-beating power

* garlic, mustard seed and chicory for their heart-pumping power

* basil and thyme for their skin-saving power

* turmeric, basil, cinnamon, thyme, saffron, and ginger for their immune-boosting power

* coriander, rosemary, cayenne, allspice and black pepper for their depression-busting power

 


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See more stories tagged with: health, aging, diet, spices, vitamins, herbs, antioxidants, minerals

Eric R. Braverman, MD is bestselling author of Younger You (2008 paperback release, McGraw-Hill).

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View:
Just Left My Kitchen...
Posted by: Lily H. on Dec 25, 2008 12:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...where I just sprinkled some fresh rosemary into my
Christmas stuffing I'm fixing for tomorrow's dinner.
Wish you all could smell it!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Another benificial herb... Posted by: That_SOB
Growing herbs at home, bring them in for the winter!
Posted by: Ottomatic on Dec 25, 2008 4:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I started with Rosemary and this year I added Thyme. Next we will add some sage and mint possibly.
They smell great and add a little spice to your life.
Garlic Rosemary smothered Lamb!

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Two teaspoons of cinnamon DAILY?
Posted by: scajomar on Dec 25, 2008 8:48 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"As little as two teaspoons of cinnamon daily for six weeks? That's gotta be a typo. How on earth could a person choke down two TEASPOONS of cinnamon every day, not to mention afford it? Will the author of this article please respond with the correct amount, which is probably two teaspoons of cinnamon per week. Thanks.

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» RE: Two teaspoons of cinnamon DAILY? Posted by: Pissed Off Woman
Buy Organic and in bulk when possible!
Posted by: lissajayne on Dec 25, 2008 3:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I try to buy all my herbs at the local natural foods store in the bulk section, then store them at home in recycled glass containers - cheaper and fresher! Growing your own is a great option as well, especially for easy to grow stuff like basil, parsley chives, etc..
Plant herbs in your garden - less grass and more edible plants is better for you, your waistline and the environment!

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Spices are the unsung heroes of a healthy eating plan
Posted by: ld7440 on Dec 29, 2008 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was glad to read that many people are extolling the virtues of herbs and spices. There are, in fact, many ways to "spice up" your life. Growing your own organic herbs is a first step - my homegrown basil was excellent last summer! - or buying in bulk to support local farmers. Turmeric and hungarian paprika are two of my favorites, chock-full of antioxidants and other nutrients, and are great in tofu scrambles, soups, potato dishes, etc. Cinnamon can go in coffee and cocoa, basil on tomatoes, mint on desserts. But don't forget how easy it is to incorporate herbs throughout the home. Hemp lavender soap is soul-soothing and emollient, eucalyptus clears nasal passages, cayenne on the back of the tongue relieves headaches. Use herbs and spices everywhere, and your life will be all the better for it.

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Cinnamon in coffee or tea
Posted by: gamoss1 on Jan 4, 2009 7:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I put one tsp. in a cup coffee twice a day. Settles a little so just swirl it around as you drink it. Bit hardcore but gets the job done. Buck a bottle at Shoprite.

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What an Awful, Ageist Title!
Posted by: elderwoman.org on Jan 7, 2009 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, the info about herbs and spices is great but the title of this article totally sucks. It is ageist. If you don’t know what I mean, imagine if the title was urging us to use ‘20 skin-lightening herbs and spices…’ The implication would be that dark skin is less desirable than light – right? Well the implication of this article’s title is that aging is a bad thing and youth is preferable to age. And that is 100% ageist.

Good nutrition makes us healthier, gives us more energy, zest and stamina and probably improves our life expectancy. It doesn’t make us younger. A bad diet doesn’t age us. Only time ages us. And it ages every one of us at the exact same rate, from the moment we are born, regardless of what we eat. You cannot 'reverse aging'.

Sure, some things make us look older than we really are. Smoking, for example. It might make a person look 60 when he or she is only 50. But what’s wrong with looking 60? The implication is that 60 is uglier than 50. So 70, presumably, must be uglier still. I am 72, so I feel insulted by that.

In fact, I love being 72. Elderhood is turning out to be the most enjoyable, interesting and fulfilling stage of my life (and the others were pretty good). I eat a highly nutritious diet and that helps to keep me healthy, fit and strong. It does not stop me aging. And neither it should. Aging is natural and irreversible, in all species, including ours.

Ageism is rife in this youth-obsessed culture. And so well-entrenched now that most people don’t even notice it. Sexism used to be like that once. So did racism. But we are gradually fixing that. Now we have to weed out ageism and give elders back the value and honor that has been stolen from them.

So please uncouple youth and wellness in your mind and in your language, as from this minute. Your elders will thank you. We don’t like being insulted.

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