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Superfoods to the Rescue

By:   Reader's Digest

Luscious strawberries dipped in rich, dark chocolate. Grilled salmon. Mashed sweet potatoes dusted with cinnamon. Spinach salad tossed with cranberries and walnuts.

A gourmet's delight? Definitely. A huge dose of heart health--from good fats and fiber to powerful antioxidants and essential vitamins and minerals? Without a doubt.

Superfoods such as the five described below work better than supplements to slash your risk of heart disease. Not only do they entertain your taste buds like a four-star chef, they also battle all six deadly heart attackers at the same time. Specifically, these amazing foods can:

  • Reduce your risk of artery-clogging atherosclerosis
  • Whittle away at cholesterol
  • Lower your blood pressure
  • Cool inflammation
  • Neutralize damaging free radicals
  • Reduce your chances of developing metabolic syndrome by keeping blood sugar lower and steadier
  • When eaten in healthy portions, help you lose weight

You don't have to go to the health food store to find them; just wheel your cart through the supermarket. (Hint: Most are in the perimeter aisles, including the produce, meat, and dairy departments.) More good news: We've pulled together the quickest, tastiest ways to cook and serve these healing foods, from tried-and-true favorites to fresh, new ideas. Healthy eating doesn't have to take extra time out of your busy day--reaching for an ounce of dark chocolate or a fistful of walnuts is as quick as grabbing a bag of chips. And the taste? Out of this world.

1. Almonds
Super nutrients. Monounsaturated fat, magnesium, calcium, potassium, fiber.
Serving size. 1 ounce (about 24 almonds); 160 calories.
Benefits. A single serving of these crunchy, protein-packed nuggets provides a whopping 9 grams of monounsaturated fat to help slash LDLs ("bad" cholesterol) and boost HDLs ("good" cholesterol). Simply choosing almonds instead of a doughnut, chips, or pretzels for two snacks a day could cut LDLs nearly by 10 percent. Almonds also pack 6 percent of your daily calcium quota and 20 percent of the magnesium you need--two minerals proven to help lower blood pressure. Bonus: You get 35 percent of the Daily Value (DV) for vitamin E, an artery-protecting antioxidant, as well as 3 grams of fiber. Just be sure to stop with one handful at snack time--advice that holds true for all nuts because they're calorie-dense.

Good ideas:

  • One serving of almonds fits neatly into an empty Altoids mints tin. Fill the tin each morning and slip it into your purse or briefcase
  • Toss some almonds into salads, stir-fries, fruit salad, or hot or cold cereal
  • Keep slivered and sliced almonds on hand (store them in the freezer for freshness) to add to vegetable dishes, muffins, and cookies

Try our Almond Lemon Chicken recipe.


2. Apples
Super nutrients. Antioxidants, fiber.
Serving size. 1 medium; 80 calories.
Benefits. Red Delicious, Granny Smith, and Gala apples earned spots on the USDA's top-20 list of antioxidant-rich foods thanks to hefty quantities of the flavonoid quercetin (flavonoids are natural chemicals in plants that, when in your bloodstream, remove free radical molecules, fight inflammation, and impede cancer). Bonus: Apples are a rich source of pectin, a soluble fiber. In a recent study at the University of California, Davis, people who ate two apples a day had fewer oxidized, artery-attacking LDLs than non-apple eaters.

Good ideas:

  • Chop an apple and add to hot cereal
  • For a portable snack, cut up an apple and place the slices in a zipper-lock plastic bag with 2 teaspoons of cinnamon. Carry it with you in an insulated lunch bag (with a freezer pack) to eat at lunch or as a snack. It tastes like apple pie, without the crust or the sugar
  • For a quick baked apple, core an apple, pack the center with raisins and walnuts, and dust with cinnamon. Place it in a bowl with 1/4 cup of orange juice, apple juice, or water and microwave on high for 5 minutes, or until done

Go to our Apple Recipe Collection.


3. Carrots

Super nutrients. One of nature's top sources of beta-carotene, an artery-protecting antioxidant.
Serving size. 1 medium; 32 calories.
Benefits. Carrots are color therapy for your cardiovascular system. These veggies' brilliant orange hue is a sign of super-high levels of beta-carotene, an antioxidant that guards against artery-clogging oxidized LDL cholesterol. Only foods like carrots offer this protection--recent studies suggest that antioxidant pills don't help your heart. Cooked carrots have twice the antioxidant power of raw carrots because heat breaks down tough cell walls so that your body can use what's inside. Carrots also provide blood pressure-lowering potassium and magnesium, plus the homocysteine-lowering combination of folate; vitamin B6; and the antioxidants alpha-carotene, lutein, and zeaxanthin.

Good ideas:

  • Set out a bowl of baby carrots when you're cooking as a healthy snack that won't fill you up with unwanted calories or wreck your appetite
  • Buy sliced and shredded carrots in the produce department; add them to soups, salads, and casseroles.
  • Instead of chips, serve presliced carrots with dip
  • Add finely grated carrots to muffins, tuna or salmon salad, and casseroles
  • Microwave baby carrots and stir in a dollop of honey for a sweet side dish
  • Roast carrots in the oven with olive oil

Find recipes for Carrots.


4. Milk

Super nutrients. Great source of blood pressure-lowering calcium, magnesium, and potassium.
Serving size. 8 ounces 1% milk;110 calories.
Benefits. Your heart--and your waistline--love it when you have a milk mustache. (So, of course, do your bones!) A growing stack of research proves that calcium and other minerals in milk help lower blood pressure by keeping arteries flexible and helping your kidneys flush pressure-boosting sodium out of your body. A glass of cold moo juice at lunch or a generous splash on your morning cereal could cut your risk of insulin resistance--a potent heart disease risk factor--by 71 percent
and help you lose weight. How? Mayo Clinic researchers suspect that calcium "down-regulates" fat absorption by fat cells and "up-regulates" fat burning.

Good ideas: 
  • A favorite cocoa recipe: Mix 1 cup of fat-free or low-fat milk, two packets of sugar substitute, and cocoa in a small saucepan or microwaveable cup and heat for about 1 minute
  • Cook hot cereal and low-sodium instant or canned soups with milk instead of water
  • Make milk your drive-through thirst quencher. Most fast-food restaurants offer the low-fat variety in cartons or single-serve bottles
  • Order a latte with fat-free milk instead of black or with cream at your favorite coffee shop
  • Make sugar-free instant pudding with low-fat or fat-free milk and serve it with berries
  • Use fat-free evaporated milk in place of regular milk in baked goods, soups, and sauces. A cup contains 742 milligrams of calcium--more than double the amount in low-fat milk
  • Whip partially frozen fat-free evaporated milk for a high-calcium dessert topping that has one-tenth the calories of regular whipped cream
  • Puree fat-free or low-fat cottage cheese and fat-free evaporated milk with some lemon juice and rosemary for a light pasta sauce

Browse recipes for Low-Fat Puddings and Custards.


5. Kidney Beans
Super nutrients. Soluble fiber, folate, potassium, magnesium.
Serving size. 1/2 cup; 112 calories.
Benefits. Eating beans four times a week--in baked beans, bean dip, chili, or a salad sprinkled with chickpeas or black beans--could cut your risk of coronary heart disease by 20 to 30 percent. Make some of them kidney beans; they're rich in LDL-lowering soluble fiber (2 grams in a 1/2-cup serving) and homocysteine-controlling folate, as well as blood pressure-easing potassium and magnesium.

Bonus: Thanks to healthy doses of fiber and protein, beans give you steady energy, not a sudden rise (and fall) of blood sugar that ups your risk of metabolic syndrome and weight gain.

Good ideas:

  • Rinse canned kidney beans before using to remove sodium. Toss them into chili, casseroles, and soups
  • For a quick tamale pie, serve warm kidney beans over a piece of cornbread and top with grated cheese
  • Make a better three-bean salad: Combine kidney, black, and white beans, then mix in chopped tomatoes and scallions. Dress with olive oil, lemon juice, and black pepper
  • In a food processor or blender, combine cooked kidney beans with garlic, cumin, and chili peppers for a delicious spread that can be used as a dip for crudités or a sandwich filling

Browse recipes for Canned Kidney Beans and even more Beans.


From Reader's Digest 30 Minutes a Day to a Healthy Heart. Buy this and other books at the Reader's Digest Store.














Comments
Bina E. 
Oct. 29, 2009 3:16 pm
Milk is a superfood? Sure this one wasnt ho(i)sted by the milk industry? Last time I checked the cows were being pumped full of hormones to make them produce like 12 gallons a day instead of the normal amount to feed their baby calf. And all those hormones (as well as puss and antibiotics) are going straight from it to the glass to your body! Be wise about which milk you drink if at all! Calcium can be obtained more from eating greens than from milk, besides. And if you want real super-food info google "David Wolfe", the expert on super-foods!!!
 
Jan. 2, 2010 7:15 am
There are some brands of milk that don't use hormones. Milk is also pasturized so that the "puss" is cooked away and only the good and natural elements of milk remain, good for serving. Drinking raw milk isn't done anymore unless you know that the cow it came from is in top health.
 
jrey07 
Jan. 8, 2010 1:28 am
Cows are not "pumped" full of hormones to produce more milk. If they are used, they are the same hormones that cows naturally produce, therefore are not harmful for human consumption. And as for the puss and antibiotics, for any cow that has an infection, is sick, or undergoing treatment with antibiotics, the milk is not allowed to go into the tank that goes to the public. Milk processing companies have strict testing procedures established by the USDA that if there levels are not met, then a hole tank of milk (thousands) of gallons could potentially be dumped at the cost to the producer so farmers are encouraged to meet those standards to bring home their paychecks.
 
Jan. 9, 2010 9:12 pm
Really appreciate this information, especially that almonds can help boost the good cholesterol. My husband has been trying to get his cholesterol in line. Last time he was checked, they told him good job on dropping the bad but we still need to boost the good. Almonds will be on my next shopping list!
 
Jan. 16, 2010 10:20 am
*scoff* This list is absolutely ridiculous. Hey America, eat more foods that you have at your doorstep already! There are plenty of foods that are way better than these that people should be incorporating into their diet more often than these foods. Try kelp for example, or maca root powder.. And don't get me started on the milk.
 
Megora 
Jan. 28, 2010 1:16 am
They forgot spinach, turmeric, sweet potatoes, extra virgin olive oil, wild caught salmon, walnuts, the list goes on. Has anyone looked at the nutrition data on nutritional yeast flakes- B vitamin overload!! The healthiest foods are also largely vegetarian/vegan-except for of course the salmon.
 
Feb. 3, 2010 6:07 am
I love milk and dairy, but I'm incredulous about touting MILK as a superfood when 75% of the world population is lactose-intolerant. I hate to say this, but milk was designed to be drunk only by babies, and not adults. The lactose-tolerant people (mostly Caucasians) are actually "mutants" who developed the lactose-metabolyzing gene. Due to all the propaganda about milk being the "perfect food" etc., it took me more than a decade to realize that my bloating and gas problems are due to milk and dairy products. I can no longer consume dairy without suffering from some side effects and even diarrhea. So much for superfoods.
 
 
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