A Fall Mushroom Feast With Nutritional Punch

A Fall Mushroom Feast With Nutritional Punch
Mushrooms have an ancient history as medicine and researchers are continuing to find new qualities to these delicious fungi. marcin jucha/Shutterstock
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People have been eating mushrooms for millennia—mainly for their earthy, meaty taste and their easy availability (although the grocery store, rather than the forest floor, is the easiest and safest place to forage mushrooms today). Even better, research continues to reveal that the health benefits of mushrooms may be far beyond what even nutritionists have long suspected.

An antioxidant food, mushrooms help to protect the body from damage-causing free radicals. The antioxidant properties of mushrooms have been successfully applied to treating cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, and cancer, according to researchers in the journal Frontiers in Pharmacology.
Susan C. Olmstead
Susan C. Olmstead
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Susan C. Olmstead writes about health and medicine, food, social issues, and culture. Her work has appeared in The Epoch Times, Children's Health Defense's The Defender, Salvo Magazine, and many other publications.
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