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Dinner Is A Date With The Doctor: 5 Asian Superfoods

Posted: 10/29/2011 12:20 pm

Medicine doesn't always come in a pill. In fact, some of the most powerful medicines are delicious and can be found at your local supermarket or "farmacy." Healing foods have been used for centuries in Asia as part of the cuisine. In Asia food and medicine are often the same thing.

Here are five foods you may never have heard of but can be found at most Asian markets and even places like Whole Foods. Try them. You might be surprised by their unique and extraordinary good taste. And they may help you lose weight, reverse diabetes, lower cholesterol and prevent cancer.

Konjac: The Asian Super Fiber

Long used to make konnyaku, a jelly prepared in Japan for over 1,500 years whose medicinal properties were appreciated as early as the 6th century, konjac fiber or glucomannan has multiple benefits. Konjac is much more viscous than usual fibers, retaining up to 17 times its weight in water.

Expanding in the stomach and the small and large intestine, it absorbs fat, accelerates elimination, reduces cholesterol, blunts sugar absorption and facilitates weight loss, in part by increasing feelings of satiety. You have it as jelly or noodles called shirataki.

Arame: A Wonder of the Sea

Arame is a marine brown algae or sea vegetable that can be added to soups, stir-frys or even made into a sea vegetable salad. It is rich in minerals calcium, iron, zinc, manganese, folate, vitamins A and K and iodine. It also boosts immunity and helps bind toxins in your body. Some even say it helps boost sex drive.

Shiitake Mushrooms: Healing from the Earth

The earthy shiitake or Chinese black mushrooms boost immunity through special polysaccharide molecules and can help prevent cancer. They are also full of minerals, especially iron, and they appear to decrease binding of immune cells to your arterial wall, preventing atherosclerosis. Aside from exposure to the sun and eating herring, mushrooms are one of the few ways you can get vitamin D. Think of them as the sunshine food.

Daikon: The Other White Meat

Daikon is a mildly-flavored large East Asian white radish. It looks like a giant white carrot. It contains digestive enzymes that help you break down food, and they contain myrosinase that boosts detoxification of environmental chemicals. Daikon is high in vitamin C and folate. Like its relatives broccoli, cabbage and kale, daikon is a cruciferous vegetable that offers cancer-protecting potential. It can be grated and eaten raw in salads, or in stir-frys or soups.

Umeboshi Plums: A New Kind of Pickle

These red little Japanese plums add a perky taste to stir-frys and soups. Besides their scintillating flavor, Japanese pickled plums have remarkable medicinal qualities. Their acidity has a paradoxical alkalinizing effect on the body, helping with fatigue, enhancing digestion and boosting the elimination of toxins. This is the Far Eastern equivalent to both aspirin and apple; it is a great hangover remedy for mornings after, and an umeboshi a day is considered one of the best preventive medicines around.

To learn more about the power of food as medicine, see www.drhyman.com.

Now I'd like to hear from you...

What are your favorite super foods?

Have you eaten any of the super foods discussed in this article? What do you think of them?

How have you used food as medicine recently?

Please share your thoughts by leaving a comment below.

To your good health,

Mark Hyman, MD

Mark Hyman, M.D. is a practicing physician, founder of The UltraWellness Center, a four-time New York Times bestselling author, and an international leader in the field of Functional Medicine. You can follow him on Twitter, connect with him on LinkedIn, watch his videos on YouTube, become a fan on Facebook, and subscribe to his newsletter.

 
 
 

Follow Mark Hyman, MD on Twitter: www.twitter.com/markhymanmd

Medicine doesn't always come in a pill. In fact, some of the most powerful medicines are delicious and can be found at your local supermarket or "farmacy." Healing foods have been used for centuries i...
Medicine doesn't always come in a pill. In fact, some of the most powerful medicines are delicious and can be found at your local supermarket or "farmacy." Healing foods have been used for centuries i...
 
 
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03:53 PM on 11/28/2011
There’s another superfood you should know about called the Aroniaberry (chokeberry). It is native to North America and contains one of the highest levels of antioxidants – anthocyanins and proanthocyanidins of any fruit. These powerful berries have been utilized for years because of their overall health and wellness benefits. Learn more at www.superberries.com.
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henriette and hube
love just is; golden in it's simplicity
02:17 PM on 11/28/2011
Love Shitake mushrooms especially broiled or baked and on whole wheat burger buns with all the good condiments. I'm having one tonight by the way.

Also use lots of dailkon grated on salads and in stir fries.

Arame, kombu and wakame are staples in my kitchen always used in soups and stir fries and always throw in some when I cook beans.

Love, love sweet potatoes. I like them baked with nothing on them accompanied with steamed spinach. What could be healthier?
04:29 AM on 11/24/2011
i'm glad one of my favorite mushrooms, Shiitake Mushrooms, made the shortlist.

For those seeking the perfect nutrition: http://woktoss.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alafonse
It's definitely a crap-shoot.
05:53 AM on 11/03/2011
The sweet potato is one of nature's most nutrient-perfect vegetables. Sweet potatoes also contain a substance that decreases insulin resistance—when I eat one a day, my appetite decreases significantly.
http://www.healthdiaries.com/eatthis/7-health-benefits-of-sweet-potatoes.html
07:50 AM on 11/03/2011
I love sweet potatoes too. My favorite superfoods are Kabocha Squash and FitFlax ( a blend of golden roasted flax seeds and chi seeds)
http://www.newyorkchick365.blogspot.com
wwhatever747
Whatever Karma Bites, Let it be, U asked for it.
04:13 AM on 11/03/2011
I'll go to TACO BELL for their box deal.
03:08 AM on 11/03/2011
Miso soup is a good food to eat as well :) Be careful with the konjac...eat it carefully so it does not get lodged in your throat.
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henriette and hube
love just is; golden in it's simplicity
02:18 PM on 11/28/2011
Miso soup is great! You can add so many different veggies to it.
02:27 AM on 11/03/2011
Cant find such foods in America !!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flowereater
Occupied.
03:23 PM on 11/27/2011
Try your local health food store or food co-op. You can probably order a lot of them online as well if you are in a rural area. Try a macrobiotic food search.
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henriette and hube
love just is; golden in it's simplicity
02:19 PM on 11/28/2011
Huh, I use them all every week except for the plums which I'm not that fond of.
01:07 AM on 11/03/2011
I am going to try some of these.The first one I am going to get is the Konjac.As I have a cholesterol
problem,and weight problem.So this will help with both of them.I am always trying new foods.As I like trying new things.And if they are good for me,well why not. I love dragen fruit,and they are very good for you.I love the ones that are dark pink on the inside.My brother-in=law doesn't have to poke himself with a needle now,cause he eats 1/4 of one every day.He has type 2 diabetes.And kiwi is another super food that I love.It is great to take.Eat three a day and you don't have to take an asprin to thin your blood.I'd say that is a good thing since asprin are not good for your stomach.
09:54 PM on 11/02/2011
OK, I've seen a few foods I've never tried in stores, simply because I know nothing about them, what they are or how they should be prepared/eaten. Take the star fruit, I've seen it in stores, but know nothing about it, so I don't buy it. If I knew what these foods looked like, taisted like, what it is 'the locally used name in stores', how to prepare it and eat it, and then what to expect, I'd be much more likely to give it a try, but you don't find that information in stores, so I stay with the same 'O', same 'O', broccoli, carrots, peas and tomatoes, and maybe an apple.
10:44 PM on 11/02/2011
starfruit is poisonous to those with kidney problems.
12:46 AM on 11/03/2011
Strawberries and spinach can be too. What's your point? Why not answer the person's question instead of bringing up a MINIMAL health risk.
12:46 AM on 11/03/2011
The star fruit just gets washed an sliced.Some people like it and some don't.Dragen fruit is at the farmers market.And is high in nutritional value.I told my sister about it and she bought some for my brother-in-law.He has stage 2 diabetes.he eats 1/4 of a dragen fruit a day.Now he test,and doesn't have to take a shot.Kiwis are very good for you to.If you have to take asprin because you had a stroke.Than just eat 3 kiwi's a day.No more asprin.
09:42 PM on 11/02/2011
Daikon on the food taste scale is well below the virtually tasteless turnip and just ahead of warm pizza box cardboard
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henriette and hube
love just is; golden in it's simplicity
02:24 PM on 11/28/2011
Oh, I love it's bitey flavor raw grated in salads and in stir fries as well as miso soup.
09:14 PM on 11/02/2011
it's shiitake not shitake. konnyaku is the plant not the jelly made from it, which isn't actually a jelly at all it's very solid. daikon getting rid of "environmental toxins" care to name these "toxins" because theres never been a medical study published and reviewed that has shown any of these "toxins" to be eliminated or even exist. umeboshi "alkalizing" the body, complete nonsense. you cannot make the body more acidic or alkaline, you can only change the acidity of urine, your stomach is so highly acidic that no amount of acid or base would change it for more than a couple of minutes. yes cancer cells can't live in an "alkaline environment" but neither can any cell in your body. if you made your blood alkaline you die. it's that simple. the human body specifically controls the ph of the body to an exact level, food will not affect it at all.
01:10 AM on 11/03/2011
You must not know what you are talking about.cause you can Alkaline the body.Food does affect it.
03:51 AM on 11/03/2011
where is your degree in biology from? would you like to explain how you survive with a deviation from the standard 7.4 ph of the human body? it's common knowledge a +- deviation of .1 from the standard is a serious medical condition, would you like to explain the science behind this "alkalizing" of the body, of course you said alkaline the body so your knowledge of science, and english seems severely lacking. now state your qualifications or shut up, because your nonsense will kill people.
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metusmetu
Sine Metu
08:41 PM on 11/02/2011
How's about we concentrate on AMERICAN FOODS for a while?
08:59 PM on 11/02/2011
Yeah, like McDONALDS!
01:30 AM on 11/03/2011
Sounds like junk food junkies to me.Not all American foods are good for you.But I will say that potatoes and eggs are if they are fixed right.Try something new! You might find that you like it,an it is good for you.It sure can't hurt you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
01:46 AM on 11/03/2011
We need a varied diet. Things that grow in the earth have no nationality. It's only climate and barriers of ocean that prevented the above from growing in this land. Nearly all of the foods that Americans eat came from Europe, Africa and Asia (ie apples, tomatoes, citrus, broccoli, spinach etc). We have lost the secrets of most of the native foods thanks to the explorers' fear of the unknown, sense of superiority and decrease in population of the indigenous American who would have known.

Again, I repeat, things that grow in the earth have no nationality.
04:18 AM on 11/03/2011
tomatoes are indigenous american, they were brought to europe from south america.
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Jon Burr
bassist, producer, food blogger
09:56 PM on 10/31/2011
For a whole book full of tasty, fun, improvisational recipes of good medicine food, have a look at
https://www.facebook.com/theimprovisingchef - and give us a "like." We're followers of Dr Hyman and adhere to his principles.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tmorris911
Give me a minute
05:02 PM on 10/31/2011
Ah, the irony, mushrooms grown in the dark are a great source of Vitamin D, the sunshine vitamin.
01:13 AM on 11/03/2011
I'm pretty shiitakes aren't grown in the dark.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tmorris911
Give me a minute
01:58 AM on 11/03/2011
Aw man! Those darn facts got me again. Thanks, I learned something new.
12:13 PM on 10/31/2011
Kit Kat bars are by far my favorite super food
01:13 AM on 11/03/2011
Kit Kat bars are not a super food.They are phony super food.The only thing good about them is if they have dark chocolate .
04:47 AM on 11/03/2011
Its a super food cause its supper tasty, duh.