source : bingcookingsecrets.com |
Teaming fresh broccoli with a spicy food that contains the enzyme
myrosinase significantly enhances each food's individual cancer-fighting
power and ensures that absorption takes place in the upper part of the
digestive system where you'll get the maximum health benefit, suggests a
new University of Illinois study.
"To get this effect, spice up your broccoli with broccoli sprouts,
mustard, horseradish, or wasabi. The spicier, the better; that means
it's being effective," said Elizabeth Jeffery, a U of I professor of
nutrition. In the study, when fresh broccoli sprouts were eaten with broccoli
powder, the scientists were able to measure bioactive compounds in the
blood 30 minutes later. When these peaked at three hours, they were much
higher when the foods were eaten together than when either was eaten
alone. Urine samples corroborated the blood results, said Jenna Cramer,
lead author of the study.
It's no secret that many people cook the benefits right out of
broccoli instead of steaming it lightly for two to four minutes to
protect its healthful properties, she said. "However, this study shows that even if broccoli is overcooked, you
can still boost its benefits by pairing it with another food that
contains myrosinase," she said.
Myrosinase is the enzyme necessary to form sulforaphane, the
vegetable's cancer-preventive component, co-author Margarita
Teran-Garcia explained. Note what happened with the fresh broccoli sprouts and broccoli
powder eaten in this experiment. The powder doesn't contain myrosinase,
but it does contain the precursor to the anti-cancer agent sulforaphane.
Eaten together, the sprouts were able to lend their myrosinase to the
powder. As predicted, both foods produced sulforaphane and provided
greater anti-cancer benefit, Jeffery said.
Other foods that will boost broccoli's benefits if they are paired
together include radishes, cabbage, arugula, watercress, and Brussels
sprouts. "Here's another benefit of protecting and enhancing the myrosinase in
your foods," Jeffery said. "If myrosinase is present, sulforaphane is
released in the ilium, the first part of your digestive system.
Absorption happens well and quickly there, which is why we saw
bioactivity in 30 minutes."
An earlier Jeffery study showed that microbiota are capable of
releasing sulforaphane in the lower gut, but absorption happens more
slowly in the colon than in the upper intestine, she said. Scientists say that as little as three to five servings of broccoli a week provide a cancer-protective benefit. "But it pays to spice it up for added benefits and find ways to make
it appealing so you don't mind eating it if you're not a broccoli fan. I
add fresh broccoli sprouts to sandwiches and add them as one of my
pizza toppings after the pie is out of the oven," Cramer said.
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