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December: Nuts

November: Persimmons

October: Tea

September: Nightshades

August: Salad Dressing

July: Quinoa

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Dec.Newsletter:Coconut

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Sept.Newsletter:Omega-3s

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July Newsletter: Eggs

June Newsletter:Mushrooms

May Newsletter: Fish

April Newsletter: Oils

March Newsletter: Millet

September 2009 Newsletter

Tip of the Month: www.tuftshealthletter.com is the website to visit if you'd like to sign up for free email updates on health research from the Tufts University School of Nutrition Science and Policy.

Food Focus: the Nightshade Family -- Potatoes, Tomatoes, peppers, and Eggplants

Every farmers' market is bursting with these summer vegetables and we are all enjoying our potato salad, our tomato sandwiches, our baba ghanoush, our ratatouille, etc.  Or are we?  For some people the vegetables in this particular family mean pain.  Osteoarthritis flares up in many who suffer from it when they eat the nightshades.  If you have any arthritic joints, it's worth a trial to see if ratatouille makes them worse, or not.

          Others in this interesting family include the hallucinogenic jimson weed, petunia, tobacco, mandrake, and capsicum (Think: paprika, chili peppers -- all the peppers except black pepper). Mandrake, a poisonous mostly European plant in this family has a history of uses in witchcraft, especially for fertility.  The Genesis story of Leah and Rachel imputes successful pregnancies to an exchange of mandrake root.

          In terms of arthritis, peppers, like the other nightshades, can be a problem.  However, chili papers differ form their cousins the bell peppers, in that they contain the anti-inflammatory chemical capsiacin, which can be palliative.  They are also pain-killers when used topically, including for arthritis.





ROSALIND MICHAHELLES --- NUTRITION MATTERS -- 2008

LOGO DESIGN BY SOPHIA MICHAHELLES

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