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Food House Project™

The Food Growing, Cooking, Preserving & Healing Self-Sufficiency Adventure

8 Ways Tomatoes Keep You Young

It looks like we may be getting an early frost tonight based on the weather forecast.  We decided to pick the rest of the tomatoes and bring them inside to continue ripening.  Our harvest was small this summer due to all the other work occupying us but we had some of the best tasting tomatoes ever.

Great taste isn't the only benefit of tomatoes.  They are an anti-aging superfood that deserves a place in the diet of anyone interested in maintaining healthy skin, preventing age-related diseases like osteoporosis, and even preventing cancer.

Lycopene found in tomatoes is one of the compounds known collectively as carotenoids.  A large volume of research has shown for decades that carotenoids help protect skin against sun damage.

The incidence and risk for most types of cancer tends to increase with age.  Research in the CMAJ:  the Canadian Medical Association Journal found that the risk of serious chronic diseases like cancer is reduced with increased tomato consumption.  Although lycopene has been credited, the scientists found that other nutrients in tomatoes may play a role.

Lycopene, widely considered the most potent antioxidant of the carotenoids, is a powerful antioxidant that not only protects against UV damage it also helps protect against damaging bacteria.

Lycopene also appears to strengthen skin by inhibiting the activity of collagenases--enzymes involved in the breakdown of collagen in the skin.  Collagen helps ensure the firmness and elasticity of your skin and prevents wrinkling.

When scientists analyzed the tissue and blood levels of lycopene in subjects they found that those people with high levels of this nutrient, primarily found in tomatoes in the Western diet, had a lower risk of chronic diseases.

Lycopene found in tomatoes keeps your teeth and gums healthy.  In studies it has shown antibacterial and antifungal properties and, specifically aided tooth and gum health.

Thanks again to their rich lycopene supply, tomatoes can help protect our bodies against the effects of toxins, especially aflatoxins (a type of mold often found in peanuts and peanut butter) and cadmium.

Numerous studies show that lycopene can assist with cardiovascular health.  Heart disease is often attributed to poor diet and aging.  Increased lycopene consumption helps to improve heart health and obviously helps to displace less healthy food choices in the diet.

Our tomato supply won't last long this fall and winter but I have saved seeds and can't wait to get next spring's larger crop underway.

Michelle

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