How to create the ultimate healing pantry

Before we had easy access to healthfood stores, acupuncturists and herbalists, our family kitchens were the go-to medicine cabinets. From spices and healthy oils to nutritionally rich plant foods, many ingredients in our kitchens are strong allies with powerful healing benefits. So the next time you develop a health niggle, chronic condition or simply notice signs that a cold is coming on, take a look in your kitchen pantry and fridge and see what potent remedies you can find there.

Star staples

Some foods are multi-healers with an impressive range of health benefits, so it’s good practice to keep them in your kitchen at all times.

Turmeric

There’s a reason why turmeric lattes (aka “golden milk”) have become such a popular choice on the cafe scene. Turmeric, known as the spice of life in India, offers many wellbeing benefits. It’s high in curcumin, which in the brain helps reduce the build-up of damaging proteins that cause Alzheimer’s disease. Studies also suggest that turmeric can reduce the spread of breast cancer and joint swelling caused by arthritis. It may also reduce blood vessel growth in fat tissue, possibly halting fat tissue secretions that promote inflammation and further weight gain, according to research from Tufts University in the US.

Tip: Add it to curries, scrambled eggs or tofu, soups, Turkish-style breakfasts, hot milky drinks, rice dishes, muffins, pancakes, freshly made hummus, vegetables (eg sweet potato, steamed cauliflower), oven-roasted chickpeas or a savoury yoghurt bowl.

Coconut oil

Next time you’re suffering from bad breath, a thrush infection or pimple breakout, reach for some coconut oil. Whether applied directly to skin, swallowed or used in a coconut oil pull (swishing the oil around your mouth), coconut oil’s high levels of medium-chain fatty acids (such as lauric, caprylic and capric acids) can help fight bacterial growth. Research from the University of Paraiba in Brazil also shows that the combination of daily exercise and coconut oil intake can help reduce high blood pressure.

Tip: As well as using coconut oil in muffins and homemade bread, it’s a good choice when oven-roasting vegetables or cooking pancakes. Coconut oil has a high smoking point, which means it maintains its health qualities even when heated to quite high temperatures.

Apple-cider vinegar

Want to blitz your nasal congestion, boost good belly bacteria, reduce your appetite and weight or lower your blood glucose levels? Through its healthy impacts on your belly microbiome (the bacteria that live in your gut), apple-cider vinegar can offer all these health benefits and more. It also helps reduce heartburn, hayfever symptoms and skin problems such as acne and pimples.

Tip: Choose an ACV that contains “the mother” as it is unrefined and boasts more beneficial bacteria. Add a tablespoon or two to a small glass of water at meals once or several times daily.

Honey

In recent years, some hospitals have been returning to the ancient remedy of honey for wounds and infections that won’t heal. Research from the American Societies for Experimental Biology has shown that bees make a protein they add to the honey called defensin-1, which scientists are now trying to harness to treat burns and skin infections and to create new treatments for antibiotic-resistant infections. Modern science is finally catching on to what healers have known for centuries: that this sweet, golden liquid has powerful antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties, which can reduce bacteria growth. For this reason, honey is an effective cough suppressant and can help reduce symptoms of allergy and bring antibiotic-resistant streptococcus infections under control.

Tip: Make sure you choose a good-quality organic raw honey. Some apiarists and honey producers bombard their bees with antibiotics all year, which can compromise the health of the bees and reduce the medicinal power of the honey.

Ginger

Gingerols, which are the active components of the thick, knotted stem of the zingiber plant, have healing super powers that go well beyond soothing morning sickness and nausea. Research shows that ginger can ease muscle pain, reduce asthma symptoms and help alleviate arthritis pain. The gingerols inhibit an enzyme called COX-2 (cyclooxygenase), which causes inflammation. They also block a particular pain receptor in the brain that responds to pain triggers such as heat and acidity. Research at the University of Minnesota in the US has also recently shown that ginger may help inhibit the growth of colon cancer cells.

Tip: As well as adding ginger to stirfries and smoothies for extra zing, slice some and steep in hot water or ginger tea for a health-boosting hot drink in the morning.

Olive oil

Rich in healthy mono-unsaturated fatty oils, olive oil lowers bad LDL cholesterol and boosts good HDL cholesterol. It also contains an anti-inflammatory compound called oleocanthal, which works in the same way as ibuprofen, so can be protective against dementia and type 2 diabetes as well as heart disease. These compounds also help to kill off cancer cells. It’s high in antioxidants and one in particular, called DHPEA-EDA, protects red blood cells from damage. This may be why olive oil appears to be protective against breast cancer. And its health benefits show. The more olive oil you eat, the less wrinkled your skin appears, according to Monash University in Melbourne.

Tip: Add a dash of cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil to pasta, dips, soups and salads. When compared to many other oils, olive oil has a higher satiety effect, keeping you full for longer, according to research from the Technical University of Munich.

Seeds

These are bursting with minerals that can aid the methylation process in your body, which helps you produce important neurotransmitters. If you are not methylating properly, your body can contain too much of chemicals like histamine and adrenalin and too little of chemicals like SAMe (S-Adenosyl-L-methionine) and serotonin, which boost your mood and help you sleep. So keep a range of seeds in a dark, cool cupboard, including flaxseeds, linseeds, pepitas, sesame seeds and sunflower seeds.

Tip: If you suffer menstrual issues like bloating, breast tenderness and mood dips, rotate seeds into your diet throughout the month. Seeds like flaxseed and pepitas can be used to stabilise oestrogen levels in the first two weeks of the menstrual cycle and sesame and sunflower seeds help to do the same job in the second half.

Salt

It may contribute to fluid retention and high blood pressure in some people, but salt is a great first line of treatment for infections. Salt water can be used in a:

Tip: If you make the concentration of salt too high, it may cause burning that can worsen or trigger inflammation. So don’t overdo it.

Pantry protection

If you want to prevent disease and treat health niggles, your pantry should always be your first port of call. Here are just a couple of examples of conditions that can be helped by healing, health-boosting foods.

Respiratory: asthma, eczema & allergy

Cardiovascular: heart complaints & blood pressure

Brain-protective foods

Feel like you keep having those “tip of the tongue” experiences where you can’t think of a word or a name? Worried that your brain might be losing its edge because you have trouble concentrating, or have to re-read whole paragraphs of your bedtime novel because the words just aren’t computing? Then head for your kitchen. Serve the following foods at breakfast, in brown-bagged lunches and home-cooked dinners to boost your memory and cognition, and help stave off dementia.

Breakfast

Lunch & dinner

Snacks & drinks

Could this meal prevent heart disease?

Want to cut your risk of cardiovascular disease by 76 per cent? The “polymeal” is designed to do just that. It’s based on research from the Netherlands and Melbourne’s Monash University, and consists of the following food daily:

6 bone boosters

Keep your bones healthy and strong by throwing these foods in your shopping trolley:

  1. Packed with vitamin D, which helps increase the absorption of calcium, making your bones stronger.
  2. A rich source of phosphorous, which helps maintain healthy bones — up to 85 per cent of the body’s phosphorous levels are found in the skeleton and teeth.
  3. These flavour enhancers contain a special peptide that helps prevent calcium being leached from bones. Their levels of silicon may also help build new bone.
  4. Pumpkin seeds. Little pepitas are a great snack because they’re high in magnesium, which works with calcium to build strong bones.
  5. The lycopene that makes tomato red helps slow the breakdown of bone.
  6. Plums and prunes. Plums are high in a natural fibre called inulin, which enhances calcium absorption and uptake, keeping bones strong. Prunes appear to help restore bone mass, which may be due their high calcium levels.

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