Men\'s Health UK - 10.2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
The idea that exotic plants possess special powers has spawned
a billion-pound industry, and our appetite for açaí bowls and
spirulina smoothies shows no sign of abating. But is it all just
a super-sales pitch? To help you sift the spiel from the science,
we explored how one such plant – moringa – earned super status

The


Making


Of A


Superfood


Words by Alan Levinovitz / Illustrations by Delcan & Company

“Moringa oleifera. Have you
ever heard of that?” Mehmet Oz, the US television
personality better known as Dr Oz, asks his audience.
It’s 2012, and Oz and a guest are standing behind a
table laden with jars of supplements. A sign reads:
“Re-energise Your Life”. Oz explains that moringa
oleifera is a tree from the Himalayas, where it has
been used for centuries as an antidote for that most
universal of afflictions: the feeling that “you’re being
sapped... [and] you don’t have enough energy”.
He presents the guest with a cup of moringa tea. It
shimmers yellowish green in the glass cup. She sips
and grimaces. She does not look re-energised.
Seven years later, health-conscious consumers
can find moringa in every Whole Foods or Holland
& Barrett and in teas, powders and capsules. There
are moringa bars, moringa energy shots and moringa
snack puffs. Its purported benefits include lowering

blood pressure and blood sugar, fighting cancer and
even protecting against arsenic toxicity. Moringa
products tend to come emblazoned with all the
standard buzzwords – “organic”, “raw”, “vegan”,
“GMO-free” – and often advertise that they’re better
for you than kale. The taste? Well, throwing moringa
in a smoothie does a good job of masking what
would otherwise be tough to swallow. It’s a bit like
grass clippings and wet earth.
Still, the global market value of moringa products
is predicted to grow by nearly 10% over the next three
years, according to research by Technavio. The world
supplement market exceeded £100bn in 2016 and,
though moringa makes up only a small portion of
that, its growth is indicative of what it takes to stand
out in a crowded field. To understand it, you have to
look beyond flavour and at how, like goji berries and
chia seeds before it, this plant turned from obscure
foodstuff into big business. That means going all the
way back to when the marketing of moringa began.

68 MEN’S HEALTH


Eat Healthyish – SUPERFAD

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