You can sometimes catch a glimpse of SuperFruits featured in news stories on your local and even national news stations as their influence in society becomes more and more prevalent. They are presented as heroes in the health field by devoted users, convinced doctors, and even scrutinizing scientists.
One major benefit of these SuperFruits is their anti-aging properties. Aging is presumed to be the result of oxidation of the body, an effect comparable to the oxidation of iron turning it to rust. This oxidation in the human body is caused by buildup of toxins or free radicals. Our body fends off aging by throwing off these free radicals. There are foods that are helpful in this process, some more than others are. How do we know which foods work the best?
A group of scientists came up with a score that they figured how to measure at a place called Brunswick Laboratories in Massachusetts. It is called the ORAC score. It measures a food’s Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity (ORAC). If a fruit has super strength in eliminating those oxygen radical villains wreaking havoc in our bodies causing it to age, the ORAC test will find out.
So who be these personalities fighting for favor in the SuperFruit field?
Enter great Morinda Citrufolia, Mengkudu Mulberry, Tahitian Noni, or what is commonly called just Noni. The noni fruit hails from Southeast Asia and the Pacific Ocean area. Introduced as a juice, it has a bitter taste. Also sold in capsule form, people take it for its many health claims. It has an ORAC score of 4,500 per 100g.
Lycium Barbarum, Chinese Wolfberry, or Goji has been used in China for thousands of years but we are just learning about it here in the United States. It has an ORAC score of 25,300 per 100g.
Mangosteen from Thailand and the Philippines has ORAC of 12,000 per 100g.
From the Brazilian Rain Forest comes the Acai Berry. It has been made popular by Dr. Oz and Dr. Perricone on the Oprah Winfrey show. Its ORAC is 16,700 per 100g.
The Chilean Wine Berry or Patagonian Maqui Berry has the highest ORAC of any fruit or berry at 27,600 per 100g.
*But wait… there are fruits who have been with us all along who also pack a super punch. They are:
Blueberry – ORAC score 6,500 per 100g
Black Raspberries – ORAC score 7,700 per 100g
Prunes – ORAC score 5,770 per 100g
Pomegranate – ORAC score 10,500 per 100g
These ORAC scores are not written in stone. Many things can influence them, like the environment, when and where they were grown, and the way the testing samples were harvested and processed. Dried fruit is more concentrated and will test higher than non-dried fruit. Also, if a sample is brought in to the lab spiked with vitamin C, that will spike the ORAC score.
Here is some food for thought to those who wish to eat well to live well. A fruit’s dark color is a giveaway to its identity of having high ORAC (Cacao counts big), and other than the rogue poisonous berries in the yard (warn the kids)… all fruits are SUPER! Especially if you have them working for you as a league!
The US Department of Agriculture recommends people consume 5,000 ORAC units every day and that happens to be the most that your body can utilize in a day. 5,000 units is still up, up, and away five times more than an average 80% of us get. Most of us do not eat enough fruits and vegetables. To the few 20% who do… “YOU’RE SUPER!”