Health & The Avocado

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I thought this was really interesting. I've always been under the impression that avocados were fattening and should be eaten in moderation. What I was really happy about is that avocados are diabetic friendly. :y2:

1. Avocados

A historical legend tells us, a Mayan princess ate the first avocado in 291 B.C. Fortunately, you don't have to be royalty to garner the rewards of this tasty tropical fruit.

Avocados, are nicknamed "alligator pears" because of their bumpy skins, and come in several varieties. Some have a green covering while others are dark purple or almost black. Avocados can be either smooth or bumpy. Some are small, and others weigh as much as 4 pounds. Yet, when you slice them open, they all have the same delicious light green, nutty-flavored flesh inside.

The avocado got its name from the ancient Aztec word for "testicle." Maybe that's why men once thought eating avocados would boost their virility.

In earlier times, avocado pulp was used as a hair pomade to stimulate hair growth and to help heal wounds. Native Americans treated dysentery and diarrhea with its seeds. Even today, its oil can be found in many cosmetics.

But the avocado probably should have been named after the Aztec word for "heart," considering how it can help this vital organ. Loaded with monounsaturated fat, potassium, fiber, and antioxidants, the avocado fights high cholesterol, high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke.

But that's not all. The "alligator pear" also snaps its mighty jaws at diabetes and cancer.

6 excellent ways avocados keep you healthy

1- Crushes cholesterol- The avocado is high in fat - 30 grams per fruit, but it's mostly monounsaturated fat. This fat helps protect good HDL cholesterol, while wiping out the bad LDL cholesterol that clogs your arteries. That means you not only lower your bad cholesterol, you also improve your ratio of good HDL to total cholesterol.

But there's more than just monounsaturated fat at work. An avocado contains 10 grams of fiber, as well as a plant chemical called beta-sitosterol. These both help lower cholesterol. Throw in vitamins C and E - powerful antioxidants that prevent dangerous free radicals from reacting with the cholesterol in your blood - and it all adds up to a healthier you.

In fact, one study from Australia demonstrated how eating half to one-and-a-half avocados a day for three weeks could lower your total cholesterol by more than 8 percent without lowering your HDL cholesterol.

During the same study, a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet also lowered the participants' total cholesterol - but slashed the "good" cholesterol by almost 14 percent.

2- Bashes high blood pressure- You've probably heard that bananas are a good source of potassium. What you probably don't know is that avocados, with over 1,200 milligrams of potassium per fruit, contain more than two-and-a-half times as much potassium as a banana. This is important because many studies show that potassium helps lower your blood pressure.

Magnesium, another important mineral found in avocados, could help lower your blood pressure, too. Some researchers think magnesium relaxes blood vessels and allows them to open wider. This gives blood more room to flow freely, reducing blood pressure. But results have been mixed. Some studies show magnesium lowers blood pressure, while others show no effect.

3- Strikes out stroke- When it comes to taking on a deadly killer like stroke, who wants to fight fair? Gang up on stroke with avocado's three heavy hitters - potassium, magnesium, and fiber.

In the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, which included more than 43,000 men, researchers found that the men who got the most potassium in their diet were 38 percent less likely to have a stroke as those who got the least. Results were lower for fiber (30 percent) and magnesium (30 percent).

4- Hammers heart disease- By controlling your cholesterol and blood pressure, avocados can help reduce your risk of heart disease.

But avocados offer more protection. If you increase your daily fiber intake by 10 grams, the amount in one avocado, you decrease your risk of heart disease by 19 percent. Vitamin C, potassium, and folate, part of the B-vitamin family, have also been linked to a reduced risk of heart disease.

Folate also helps your heart by keeping homocysteine from building up to dangerous levels. Homocysteine, a by-product of protein metabolism, can harm your arteries and increase your chances of a heart attack or stroke.

According to the California Avocado Commission, avocados have more folate per ounce than any other fruit.

5- Defends against diabetes- If you have diabetes, you're probably looking for ways to replace the saturated fat in your diet with more carbohydrates.
Instead, consider substituting some of those carbohydrates with monounsaturated fat, the kind you get from avocados. Not only do avocados lower your LDL cholesterol without lowering HDL cholesterol, they also can reduce the amount of triglycerides, another type of fat, in your blood. A high triglyceride level can be a warning sign of heart disease.

Eating high-fiber foods, like avocados, can benefit people with type 2 diabetes in several ways. One study published in The New England Journal of Medicine found that a high-fiber diet (50 grams per day) lowered cholesterol, triglyceride, glucose, and insulin levels.

Avocados have earned the backing of the American Diabetes Association, which has included avocados in its collection of suggested recipes.

6- Curbs cancer- Another reason to eat a lot of fiber is its possible protective effect against certain cancers, particularly colon and breast cancer.

Researchers looking at data from The Seven Countries Study recently concluded that adding 10 grams of fiber to your daily diet could cut your risk of dying from colon cancer by 33 percent over 25 years.

Although a few studies have found fiber ineffective in preventing cancer, many experts still recommend eating plenty of high-fiber foods.

Avocado's arsenal of powerful antioxidants - glutathione and vitamin C - also help fight cancer by neutralizing harmful free radicals that can damage your cells. Glutathione may ward off oral and throat cancers, and vitamin C has been linked to lower rates of oral, breast, lung, stomach, and cervical cancers.
And don't forget about beta-sitosterol and folate. They may protect you from colon and breast cancer, too.
 
Good information. I did not know this. I like avocado; but I have avoided eating a lot of it because I though it was too fat. I think I will make some guacamole today.




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Nothing nicer than your own fruit trees - when I was kid growing up in "Zululand" an area in what was then the Province of Natal, we had all sorts of fruit trees. Nothing sweeter than naturally tree ripened fruit. No wonder we were such healthy kids.
 
I grew up on a farm until I was 13 so we kids had a solid diet during those early years.
My wife and I really enjoy the late summer/early fall when the harvest is in full swing and the produce is fresh off the fields.
 
And you guys were never sick! We had mango, avo, walnut, nectarine, peach, lemon and a couple of others. I almost pity kids today who grow up in the city.

I do, too. I made sure my kids were raised in the country in their earlier years.


I grew up on a farm until I was 13 so we kids had a solid diet during those early years.
My wife and I really enjoy the late summer/early fall when the harvest is in full swing and the produce is fresh off the fields.

There is nothing like fresh produce. TUP




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The strawberry industry is very big here and the berries are picked in late June.
We have many U-pick fields and it used to be a family day out for us when my kids were small.
We also have many farmers markets and travelling vendors who bring the berries or produce in from the fields that day.
There's nothing better than fresh produce.
 
I have been gathering pecan on my friend's ranch. Her trees are loaded this year and they are now dropping. Now if I can just convince her to make a fresh pecan pie... BGRIN




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I have been gathering pecan on my friend's ranch. Her trees are loaded this year and they are now dropping. Now if I can just convince her to make a fresh pecan pie... BGRIN




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No Carl, don't ruin a pecan by cooking it.

Growing up both of my grandmothers had pecan trees, one had three and the other had five. I got sick of finding pecans in everything they baked.

I learned to shoot because of the pecan trees (5) at my mother's Mom's house. We would sit out under one of the trees with our BB guns and shoot pecans. The real firearms lesson came when my grandmother found some pecans with BB's in them. She got a little upset to say the least. One of my cousins popped off with they are hard to hit and not all fall after being hit. She grabbed his BB gun and said follow me. She then proceeded to shoot a bunch of them hitting only the stem and did not miss a single one while showing us up. From that point on we were told if we couldn't do the same then we weren't allowed to use pecans as targets. We learned and became almost as good of a shot as she was.

Man I miss the farm and the fresh foods we always had while growing up.


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Hemibee - what a great story. Moral is: Don't mess with Grandma! But nothing beats fresh, homegrown produce. Even eggs from real farm scratchers instead of battery hens taste a million% better. We used to shoot papaya's (called paw-paws here - they're bigger than papayas but same family) with BB's - made a helluva mess though and we got into big trouble with my mother.
I'm about to start replanting my home veggie patch now that the rains have finally arrived and I know we won't be getting any more frost.
 
Hemibee - what a great story. Moral is: Don't mess with Grandma! But nothing beats fresh, homegrown produce. Even eggs from real farm scratchers instead of battery hens taste a million% better. We used to shoot papaya's (called paw-paws here - they're bigger than papayas but same family) with BB's - made a helluva mess though and we got into big trouble with my mother.
I'm about to start replanting my home veggie patch now that the rains have finally arrived and I know we won't be getting any more frost.

Mom was sitting and talking with a couple of her sisters and we told them how we were shown up and all they could do was laugh. After they finally caught their breath they told us a little something about Memaw that we didn't know. While they were growing up, Memaw would head out to the woods after feeding them breakfast to get meat for supper and she would be back at the house before they left for school and she always had a meal's worth of squirrel when she would return. The only sign of injury in the squirrels was the bullet hole in their eye. She said it would ruin the meat if the kill shot was made anywhere else on their body.

They said this was mostly because she grew up too poor to be able to afford wasting money on nonproductive bullets. Well that and being part Choctaw Indian, she had a way of moving undetected thru the woods.

She also grew the best figs I've ever tasted. Her blackberries, tomatoes and cucumbers were great too. My grandfather grew everything else on the farm but these were in what she called the kitchen plot.


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