Wednesday, 7 November 2007

It's official!

You know it and I know it.

But now it's official. Mushrooms are officially very good for you.

According to scientists, there are five foods that should have a place in your diet. Now, OK, the first four are slightly off the wall and very American - but, hey, nobody ever went bust by underestimating the taste of our friends from across the pond! The first four are - wait for it - peanut butter, eggs, coffee and avocados. But there at number 5 is our fave - the humble mushroom!

The misconception is that mushrooms are a low-calorie food with little nutritional benefit. But whilst they may be 90 percent water and have only 18 calories per cup, mushrooms are now getting serious scientific attention. Laboratory reports and animal studies show that compounds in mushrooms may do everything from bolster immune function to suppress breast and prostate cancers to decrease tumor size. And now, American researchers find that mushrooms, from the humble button to the giant portobello, harbour large amounts of an antioxidant called L-ergothioneine. The scientific buzz is that fungi, for the moment, are the only foods that contain this compound.

While scientists work to figure out how these findings will translate to dietary advice, there are plenty of reasons to enjoy mushrooms. Clare Hasler, Ph.D., a well-known expert in functional foods and executive director of the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science at the University of California, Davis, points out that mushrooms offer a healthy helping of the blood pressure-lowering mineral potassium. "Most people might be surprised to learn that while orange juice is touted as one of the highest potassium foods, one medium portobello mushroom actually has more potassium," she says. "And five white button mushrooms have more potassium than an orange".

So there you go - it must be true!!

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