Mushrooms are no nutritional lightweights, either. Consider:
* One portobello, for example, delivers more potassium than a banana. Potassium helps maintain normal heart rhythm, fluid balance, and muscle and nerve function. It can also keep your ticker ticking and your brain thinking: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration notes that foods high in potassium and low in sodium may reduce the risk of high blood pressure and stroke.
* Mushrooms also pack a lot of selenium, which partners with vitamin E to produce antioxidants that neutralize the cell-damaging free radicals that can increase the risk of cancer and other diseases. For example, one study, published in the British Journal of Urology, found that men who eat plenty of selenium-rich foods can reduce their risk of prostate cancer.
* According to Solomon P. Wasser, Ph.D., editor in chief of the International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms, compounds in various mushrooms have been found to enhance the overall function of the immune system, fight cancer, and act as nature's analgesic with their anti-inflammatory powers.
While mushroom's health benefits may surprise you, health-care practitioners have actually used them for centuries to treat diseases. In fact, there was once so much faith in the benefits of certain mushrooms, this lowly fungus assumed godlike status. In China, the Reishi goddess was named after the reishi mushroom, worshipped for--no surprise--bringing health, life and eternal youth. Today the study of medicinal mushrooms continues, albeit absent the deities.
Developing the mind is important, but developing a conscience is the most
precious gift parents can give their children. John Gray