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Food

Time to fress on cress

No vegetable packs a bigger nutritional punch than watercress

July 28, 2010 14:48
Watercress is great in a salad, with baked potatoes or in soup

By

Ruth Joseph

2 min read

For years spinach, for its weight, was believed to be the most nutritious green vegetable. Popeye grew muscles eating cans of the stuff. But our knowledge has increased over time and we now know that although spinach contains numerous vital nutrients, and is particularly helpful with problems involving damaged eyesight, within those wonderful glossy leaves lies a chemical called oxalic acid which blocks iron's natural absorption.

If you are looking for the best nutrition per gram then fresh peppery watercress is the perfect ingredient. By weight watercress has more vitamin C than an orange, more calcium than milk and a mere 4oz will provide the full adult daily requirement of potassium. Meanwhile, its massive content of folic acid makes it ideal for pregnant women.

Yet even more exciting are its phytochemicals such as beta-carotene and flavenoids, which combat cancer problems. In fact new studies from the University of Southampton will be published in September this year, on using watercress in the fight against breast cancer. Its high iodine content helps the thyroid function normally. It is known to have a diuretic action helping to draw excess fluid out of the body and its cleansing action helps to improve the complexion. While in India it is chewed to prevent bleeding gums.

Watercress or nasturtium officinale - nasturtium is Latin for nose-twister, referring to the plant's heady scent - is one of our most ancient plants. Its history reaches back to Hippocrates who founded the first European hospital next to natural springs in order to grow the perfect watercress, after attending a "medical school" in Egypt where ancient Pharaohs had served freshly squeezed watercress juice to their slaves to increase productivity.

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