October 16, 2007

Mmmmmm.......

What makes garlic good for you?

In a study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers show that eating garlic appears to boost our natural supply of hydrogen sulfide. Hydrogen sulfide is actually poisonous at high concentrations — it’s the same noxious byproduct of oil refining that smells like rotten eggs. But the body makes its own supply of the stuff, which acts as an antioxidant and transmits cellular signals that relax blood vessels and increase blood flow.

In the latest study, performed at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, researchers extracted juice from supermarket garlic and added small amounts to human red blood cells. The cells immediately began emitting hydrogen sulfide, the scientists found.

The power to boost hydrogen sulfide production may help explain why a garlic-rich diet appears to protect against various cancers, including breast, prostate and colon cancer, say the study authors. Higher hydrogen sulfide might also protect the heart, according to other experts. Although garlic has not consistently been shown to lower cholesterol levels, researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine earlier this year found that injecting hydrogen sulfide into mice almost completely prevented the damage to heart muscle caused by a heart attack.

And here's a useful cooking tip:

Many home chefs mistakenly cook garlic immediately after crushing or chopping it, added Dr. Kraus. To maximize the health benefits, you should crush the garlic at room temperature and allow it to sit for about 15 minutes. That triggers an enzyme reaction that boosts the healthy compounds in garlic.

Of course, this being the Grey Lady, the article has to go and say something stooopid:

Now, the downside. The concentration of garlic extract used in the latest study was equivalent to an adult eating about two medium-sized cloves per day. In such countries as Italy, Korea and China, where a garlic-rich diet seems to be protective against disease, per capita consumption is as high as eight to 12 cloves per day.

While that may sound like a lot of garlic, Dr. Kraus noted that increasing your consumption to five or more cloves a day isn’t hard if you use it every time you cook. Dr. Kraus also makes a habit of snacking on garlicky dishes like hummus with vegetables.

This is a downside? Are you kidding me? There's nothing you can't do with this wonder-herb. Try some in an omlette. Dice it up and toss it in yer salad. Anything cooked in olive oil on the stove-top can also be cooked with garlic. And pasta? Geddouda here! And the NYT thinks this is difficult? Jeesh!

Then there's the smell. Always with the smell:

Garlic can cause indigestion, but for many, the bigger concern is that it can make your breath and sweat smell like…garlic. While individual reactions to garlic vary, eating fennel seeds like those served at Indian restaurants helps to neutralize the smell.

Suff on your "concern". As I've said before, I'd use garlic-based toothpaste if it were available.

Posted by Robert at October 16, 2007 01:30 PM | TrackBack
Comments

Remember, garlic does not give you BAD breath, it gives you GARLIC breath....and they are not the same thing.

Posted by: Mike at October 17, 2007 12:02 AM

You so need to go the Gilroy Garlic Festival in California. Garlic everything (including garlic ice cream - but I don't remember garlic toothpaste.)

Posted by: Zendo Deb at October 17, 2007 12:31 PM

Zendo - Years ago I went to a garlic festival at the Rebec Vineyard in Central Virginny. As is usually the case, the wine tasted like cough syrup, but the garlicky parts were mighty nice.

Posted by: Robbo the LB at October 17, 2007 02:10 PM

I don't remember wine, though since Gilroy is in CA, the wine was probably good. The beer - standard, non-garlic variety - flowed freely.

Garlic shrimp, garlic bread, garlic in the tomato sauce, garlic in the cheese, roast garlic, ...

After all of that, the garlic ice cream tasted like vanilla.

Posted by: Zendo Deb at October 19, 2007 07:58 PM