Men\'s Health UK - 10.2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
DON’T DUCK OUT OF LIVER PÂTÉ’S
MOOD-BOOSTING PROPERTIES

Black garlic


relish


Pickle, jam, jelly, chutney – call
it what you like, this hipster
preserve has benefits that
raw garlic can’t match. The
enzymes are broken down
through roughly 40 days of
heat-ageing, which causes its
sugars and amino acids to
react, hence its darker colour.
Scientists at the National
Taiwan University found that
it could have twice as many
available antioxidants as its
paler counterpart. It has a
sweet, tangy flavour, meaning
you can put away more of it,
too. Or try Hawkshead’s black
garlic ketchup on your next
cheese toastie.

Peanut
butter

You could buy a bag of raw,
activated macadamias from
Whole Foods. But for the
sizeable compromise you’ll
make in flavour, you’ll gain
nothing in health benefits.
Good PB brands roast the nuts
in their skins, then grind them
to a paste, adding nothing but
a pinch of salt. Studies show
they rival the antioxidant
content of strawberries. What’s
more, the roasting process
can actually increase the nuts’
overall antioxidant content
by more than a fifth.

74 MEN’S HEALTH

Duck


liver pâté


Duck liver is a nutritional OG – just one packs
400% of your daily mood-boosting vitamin B12
and 130% of your copper, for immunity. That
said, you’re unlikely to pop to the butcher’s
and ask for waterfowl organs. Spreading it on
toast, however? Ducks and bread is a classic
combo. Plus, a spread of pâté has the same
calories as your standard smashed avo.

If there’s one point
on which all trending diets
converge, it’s that processed
foods are a bad thing. It’s the
dictum on which most nutri-
puritans agree, from vegans
to keto-eaters. It’s not without
basis. In two recent British
Medical Journal papers, a diet
based heavily on industrially
manufactured foods was
linked to a shorter lifespan. But
“processed” is an ill-defined

term. It runs the gamut from sun-


dried tomatoes to fluoro-squeezy


cheese. Fermentation? That’s
a process. Brining, marinating,
poaching... Essentially, any food
that has not been pulled off a tree
or out of the ground has been
processed. It makes our food
easier to digest, last longer and
a damn sight more enjoyable,
too. To disparage it is misguided
at best, snobbish at worst. So,
we asked a panel of nutritionists
to run us through the tins, cans
and packets that are more
than worth their salt, from the
commonplace to the gourmet.
Because life’s too short to bake
your own beans, after all.

MH’s Shelf Raiders


Renee McGregor
Leading sports dietitian
with 20 years’ experience
reneemcgregor.com

Jo Travers
Registered dietitian and
author of The Low-Fad Diet
thelondonnutritionist.co.uk

Alice Mackintosh
Harley Street nutritional
food therapist
alicemackintosh.com

Rhiannon Lambert
Nutritionist specialising in
weight management and
sports rhitrition.com

Ta b i t h a Wa r d
Registered nutritionist with
a degree in food marketing
and human nutrition

Marek Doyle
Nutritional therapist and
hormone consultant
marekdoyle.com

Parmigiano


Reggiano


It’s not just a slightly more
pretentious term for stinky
Parmesan. Cheese bearing
this official moniker is subject
to rigorous standards that
your average wedge is not.
Cows are better fed, the milk
isn’t heat-treated, and it must
be aged for at least a year. It
makes a difference: a study
published in Cancer Research
found polyamine compounds
in well-aged cheeses can
counteract liver damage. An
indulgent way to offset prior
indulgences, in other words.

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