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Buckwheat
flour & honey: ancient foods that may
become superfoods
of the future
Several types
of honey have been found to contain antioxidants.
"Buckwheat" honey, however, has
been found to have much
higher levels of antoxidants than other
honeys, and when consumed actually translates
to an increased antioxidant activity of
blood (J
Agric Food Chem. 2003 Mar 12;51(6):1732-5).
but whether this relates to improved health
is unknown J
Agric Food Chem. 2003 Feb 26;51(5):1500-5.
In Australia,
buckwheat honey is hard to find. America
produces this honey and China produces a
blend of buckwheat honey and other honey
called "bamboo" honey.
Buckwheat
is not a form of wheat. Though its
similar
to wheat in nutrition, buckwheat isnt
actually a grainit comes from a hardy,
weed-like plant related to rhubarb. Buckwheat
has a distinctive three-cornered tan seed
and has been used for centuries by many
countries around the world before wheat
became a staple.
Buckwheat grains/flour is high in protein
(good amino acid profile), fiber, magnesium,
copper, manganese, antioxidant flavonoids
(especially rutin) and lignans. Buckwheat
is gluten free thus can be consumed by people
with coeliac disease. Diets
that contain buckwheat have been linked
to lowered risk of developing high cholesterol
and high blood pressure. The Yi people of
China consume a diet high in buckwheat (100
grams per day, about 3.5 ounces). When researchers
tested blood lipids of 805 Yi Chinese, they
found that buckwheat intake was associated
with lower total serum cholesterol, lower
low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL--the
form linked to cardiovascular disease),
and a high ratio of HDL (health-promoting
cholesterol) to total cholesterol.
Preliminary
animal studies suggest that it has the
ability to reduce body fat, reduce
cholesterol, prevent gallstones and
seems
to help lower blood sugar levels (implications
for diabetes management).
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