Three Little Known Superfoods. Hello everyone, I hope you are well. In today’s post, I will be sharing a guest post from Kash Atwal. Kash Atwal co-founded Operate, the UK’s first nootropic sports drink. Kash will share three little-known superfoods and why you need to be eating them. Most of us already know about superfoods like blueberries, beetroot, spirulina etc., but many others are just as good, if not better, for our health. Three little known ones that we should all be considering are Yuzu, Ashwagandha, and Griffonia Seed.
Three Little Known Superfoods
Superfoods. You know all about them. Blueberries, beetroot, spirulina… Read the articles, bought the smoothies, reaped the health benefits…
But let’s recap. What is a superfood exactly? Essentially, to be classed as a superfood a particular food or drink must be dense in beneficial nutrients, such as vitamins and minerals, antioxidants and essential fatty acids, usually while being relatively low in calories. Superfoods are mostly plant-based but ingredients such as salmon are included within their number.
Although some dismiss superfoods as faddy, it is easy to see why their popularity has endured. After all, who can argue that including nutrients in your day-to-day diet promotes health and wellbeing and may also prevent joint, and sometimes life-limiting, diseases?
You may think you know all the best superfoods, but there are three lesser-known contenders that are well worth adding to your diet: Yuzu, Ashwagandha and Griffonia Seed.
YUZU
If you’re a gamer or have a gamer in your household, your first thought might be that this is the popular Nintendo Switch emulator. But this is not the Yuzu we are talking about here.
As the Latin name implies, Yuzu or Citrus Junos is a citrus fruit. It is similar in size and appearance to a tangerine but with thicker, bumpier skin. Its taste, however, is sharper – more like a combination of lemon, lime and grapefruit. Indeed, it is considered by some to be a citrus hybrid. However, Yuzu’s seeds are bigger and more numerous than other citrus fruits, meaning that when extracting the flesh / juice Yuzu has a lower yield than other family members.
It’s commonly believed that the Yuzu fruit originated in China—along the Yangtze River—and is still grown there today, as well as in Australia, Spain, Italy, France and Korea. However, Yuzu has a long history in Japan, reaching around 1300 years ago. It has been used as a medicine, and it is now said that the fragrance of the Japanese fruit is superior to that grown in other countries. Japan produces around 27,000 tons of Yuzu every year.
Superfood Properties
The reason Yuzu was traditionally used as a medicine – particularly for warding off colds – is very likely to be down to its high concentration of vitamin C. Vitamin C is, of course, a powerful antioxidant and is found alongside several other antioxidants in the Yuzu fruit, including flavonoids and carotenoids. Antioxidants neutralise potentially harmful free radicals—which damage cells and can cause oxidative stress—thus, antioxidants are widely held to reduce the risk of various diseases, including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and even certain cancers.
In addition to the antioxidant content, numerous animal studies have shown Yuzu’s health benefits. They indicate benefits for diabetes, cholesterol reduction, heart and circulation, bone health, and potentially fighting certain infections.
The star of the Yuzu show, though, may well be Limonene: an essential oil found in the thick, bumpy skin. Studies have shown this oil to possess beneficial properties, including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and possibly even disease prevention.
How To Get It Into Your Diet
In East Asian cuisine, the whole of the yuzu fruit is used—juice, peel and seeds—as a flavouring agent in seasoning, sauces, marmalades, drinks and desserts.
The fact that Yuzu is very sour means you’re unlikely to want to eat it like you might other citrus fruits, such as an orange. In the UK, Yuzu is an expensive fruit, but if you can get your hands on it, Yuzu can be used in much the same way as lemons and limes, with both the juice and zest useable to add flavour and zing to a food dishes or drinks. You can also now buy Yuzu juice and other beverages with Yuzu juice, but check the sugar levels in these products, or you may negate the health benefits.
ASHWAGANDHA
Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) is the winter cherry or Indian ginseng. You’re most likely to have heard of it if you are familiar with Ayurveda (the ancient Indian system of medicine that takes a natural, holistic approach to curing disease).
The name may be a bit of a mouthful, but its meaning is quite simple: it describes the odour of the root – a non-literal but equivalent translation is ‘smells like a horse. This root is the base of an evergreen shrub that grows in India, the Middle East, and parts of Africa.
Like Yuzu, it has been used for thousands of years – possibly before 6000BC. In the Ayurvedic tradition, it is used as what is known as a Rasayana, for its wide-ranging health benefits and for promoting physical and mental health in those who take it.
Superfood Properties
As per the Ayurvedic position, this herb benefits physical and mental health and wellbeing. In physical terms, studies have shown that Ashwagandha can help reduce blood glucose and triglycerides (fat in the blood). Implying positive effects on diabetes, but it has also been shown to improve the performance of the heart and lungs when it comes to delivering oxygen to muscles.
If you are keen on fitness, you may be interested to know that there have been studies on the herb showing positive results in improving muscle strength and size.
While bigger muscles may make some people happy, Ashwagandha’s potential mental health benefits go beyond that. It is probably best known for its purported ability to reduce anxiety and stress and aid sleep. Other studies have also suggested it has benefits for memory and focus.
If that were not enough, further studies (there have been a lot) have evidenced an improvement in sexual function in women and potentially positive effects on fertility in men.
How To Get It Into Your Diet
Of course, you can take Ashwagandha as a health supplement in capsule or powder form, but if you are not one for popping pills, it can be taken as a tonic, as it has been traditionally. Unlike some herbs, this cannot be very pleasant, so it is best mixed with other ingredients. You could combine your traditional combination with milk, ghee and honey, or buy a pre-prepared drink, perhaps with other beneficial nutrients.
GRIFFONIA SEEDS
These are the Griffonia simplicifolia plant’s seeds, a climbing shrub found in West and Central Africa. Local people use the leaves to make palm wine and the sap can also be drunk. Different parts of the plants are traditionally used for various ailments: the leaf sap for kidney issues or inflamed eyes; the bark for syphilitic sores; and a paste made from both stems and leaves are used on wounds and decaying teeth.
However, the medicinal properties of the seeds truly set this plant aside as one of nature’s miracle workers. The seeds are a natural source of a chemical called 5-hydroxytryptophan (more commonly known as 5-HTP).
Superfood Properties
Essentially, the superfood qualities of the Griffonia seed are that of 5-HTP, another substance that has undergone substantial research. 5-HTP is an amino acid that helps your body produce serotonin, a chemical messenger that transmits signals between nerve cells. When low serotonin levels lead to various health issues, which is why topping up on 5-HTP can help redress them.
Perhaps most well-studied is the effect of 5-HTP on depression symptoms and it is believed that the development of raising serotonin levels can help reduce symptoms. Also, because serotonin can be converted into the ‘sleep hormone’ melatonin, it may aid in restful sleep. It can also increase feelings of being full, thus decreasing appetite and promoting weight loss.
More specifically, 5-HTP, found in Griffonia seeds, is also being researched concerning benefits for migraines and fibromyalgia.
How To Get It Into Your Diet
As with Ashwagandha, 5-HTP supplements are readily available. It is also found in combination with nutrients with similar properties, for example sleep-promoting ingredients, in supplement form. Look also for drinks with Griffonia seed as an ingredient. There are drinks available now with all three of these little known superfoods included. For example, Operate is a nootropic sports drink containing Ashwagandha, Yuzu and Griffonia Seed, giving you a triple superfood hit in one go!
So, these three are the powerful yet little known superheroes – or perhaps super-fruit, super-root and super-seeds – that I think all health-conscious consumers should be looking out for right now to support their physical and mental health. And they are particularly beneficial if you are very active. You can take them as nutritional supplements, combine them into foods or drinks, or look for a drink that combines all these super ingredients, such as Operate.
I hope you enjoyed that.
Talk Soon
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kash Atwal is co-founder of Operate, the UK’s first nootropic sports drink ormulated to help you operate your mind and body. This plant-powered drink comes in three unique and delicious flavours; peach and green tea (for energy), raspberry and cranberry (to speed recovery) and lemon and Yuzu (to give you a boost) ach bottle is low in calories, has no added or refined sugars and is full of vitamins and minerals, branched-chain amino acids (BCAA) and a range of superfood ingredients perate is specifically designed to deliver the best nutritional hydration without compromising on taste ww.operatedrinks.com
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2 Comments
Rosey
I wish I had Yuzu right now. I woke up with a nasty cold.
Glass Mosaic Tiles
I thought I knew all the superfoods!!! I’ve never heard of these three superfoods, this is amazing…