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Seven anti-aging super foods

Chocolate & Nut
Butter Bites
A few weeks ago
I was using my flat iron and when I looked in the mirror to admire my ’do, I
discovered my first gray hair (gasp!). It was the first time I was visibly
confronted with the reality that, surprise, I will age, and I’m not 18
anymore no matter how good I feel.
I already have the
exercise part down, so on my quest for a fountain of youth I’m paying more
attention to research on how to eat to age healthfully. The best information
I’ve found?
7 anti-aging super foods
and recipes to enjoy them in, from Peter Jaret’s James Beard
Foundation award-winning article in EatingWell Magazine, “The
Search for the Anti-Aging Diet.”
Read on to find out
more about the 7 foods to keep you young:

Chocolate
The Kuna people of the San Blas islands, off the coast of Panama, have a
rate of heart disease that is nine times less than that of mainland
Panamanians. The reason? The Kuna drink plenty of a beverage made with
generous proportions of cocoa, which is unusually rich in flavanols that
help preserve the healthy function of blood vessels. Maintaining youthful
blood vessels lowers risk of high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, kidney
disease and dementia.
Get sweet
satisfaction in seconds with
delicious chocolate
recipes, such as Chocolate & Nut Butter Bites (which include two
of the 7 anti-aging super foods!):
Chocolate & Nut
Butter Bites
8 1/4-ounce squares
of bittersweet chocolate
4 teaspoons almond, cashew or pistachio butter
Top each chocolate
square with 1/2 teaspoon nut butter of your choice (almond, cashew,
pistachio). Two sandwiches make one serving.
Per serving: 79
calories; 6 g fat (2 g sat, 1 g mono); 0 mg cholesterol; 9 g carbohydrate; 1
g protein; 1 g fiber; 12 mg sodium; 20 mg potassium. What you get:
Magnesium, copper, chromium. 1/2 Carbohydrate Serving. Exchanges: 1/2 other
carbohydrate, 1 fat.

Blueberries
In a landmark study published in 1999, researchers at Tufts University’s
Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging fed rats blueberry
extract for a period of time that in “rat lives” is equivalent to 10 human
years. These rats outperformed rats fed regular chow on tests of balance and
coordination when they reached old age. Compounds in blueberries (and other
berries) mitigate inflammation and oxidative damage, which are associated
with age-related deficits in memory and motor function. Eat more blueberries
with
healthy blueberry
recipes.

Fish
Thirty years ago, researchers began to study why the native Inuits of Alaska
were remarkably free of heart disease. The reason, scientists now think, is
the extraordinary amount of fish they consume. Fish is an abundant source of
omega-3 fats, which help prevent cholesterol buildup in arteries and protect
against abnormal heart rhythms. Eat some tonight with a
healthy fish recipe.

Nuts
Studies of Seventh-Day Adventists (a religious denomination that emphasizes
healthy living and a vegetarian diet) show that those who eat nuts gain, on
average, an extra two and a half years. Nuts are rich sources of unsaturated
fats, so they offer benefits similar to those associated with olive oil.
They’re also concentrated sources of vitamins, minerals and other
phytochemicals, including antioxidants.

Wine
Drinking alcohol in moderation protects against heart disease, diabetes and
age-related memory loss. Any kind of alcoholic beverage seems to provide
such benefits, but red wine has been the focus of much of the research. Red
wine contains resveratrol, a compound that likely contributes to its
benefits-and, according to animal studies, may activate genes that slow
cellular aging.

Olive Oil
Four decades ago, researchers from the Seven Countries Study concluded that
the monounsaturated fats in olive oil were largely responsible for the low
rates of heart disease and cancer on the Greek island of Crete. Now we know
that olive oil also contains polyphenols, powerful antioxidants that may
help prevent age-related diseases.

Yogurt
In the 1970s, Soviet Georgia was rumored to have more centenarians per
capita than any other country. Reports at the time claimed that the secret
of their long lives was yogurt, a food ubiquitous in their diets. While the
age-defying powers of yogurt never have been proved directly, yogurt is rich
in calcium, which helps stave off osteoporosis and contains “good bacteria”
that help maintain gut health and diminish the incidence of age-related
intestinal illness.
By Michelle
Edelbaum

Michelle is the associate editor of interactive for
EatingWell Media Group.
In between editing and writing, she enjoys sampling the tasty results of the
easy, healthy recipes that the EatingWell Test Kitchen cooks are working on.
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