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experiencelifemag.com
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Broccoli
This superstar vegetable helps fight cancer, reduces the risk of heart disease
and osteoporosis, and even helps prevent birth defects.
Food Basics
Nutritional Know-How
Eat Up!
Kitchen Tricks
Whoever told you to “eat your broccoli” had your best interests in mind.
Broccoli is filled with disease-fighting nutrients. And when cooked properly —
or creatively prepared raw — it’s scrumptious, too.
Food Basics
Broccoli originated in Italy, and like turnips, kohlrabi,
cabbage, Brussels sprouts, kale, collard greens and cauliflower, it is a
cruciferous vegetable, or brassica. Its edible parts include the leaves, crunchy
stems and soft clusters of tiny green flower buds called florets. When
purchasing, select broccoli with tightly closed buds, crisp leaves, and a deep
emerald color or purplish tinge. When cooked, broccoli may release sulfur
compounds, creating an unpleasant smell but leaving flavor unaffected.
Nutritional Know-How
Broccoli contains sulforaphane, a phytonutrient that
helps the body’s detoxification enzymes eliminate abnormal cells, slow tumor
growth and reduce the risk of developing intestinal polyps (which usually
precede colon cancer). It also helps support healthy functioning (think
toxin-filtering) of the liver. Other nutrients in broccoli help the body repair
sun-damaged skin, reduce the risk of heart disease and cataracts, prevent or
delay osteoporosis, support the immune system, reduce the risk of birth defects,
and fight prostate, ovarian and bladder cancer. One 3⁄4-cup serving of
steamed broccoli contains more vitamin C than a typical orange, and it’s also
high in vitamins K and A and calcium. Broccoli boasts numerous anti-inflammatory
properties, and its dark-green leaves are rich in beta-carotene.
Eat Up!
Boiling broccoli can cause significant nutrient loss, and it
rarely produces optimal flavor. If eating it raw doesn’t appeal to you, you can
lightly steam or sauté it, or roast it (often the best-tasting option). When
cooked, broccoli should maintain its bright green color (pale green broccoli is
a sign that it has been overcooked). - To roast broccoli,
first lightly toss florets and small, evenly cut stalks in extra-virgin olive
oil. Season with sea salt, and slivered or minced garlic. In a 475-degree F
oven, roast for three to five minutes, then turn over and roast an additional
three minutes until slightly browned at the edges.
- Add broccoli florets and peeled, chopped stalks to stir-fries. To
cook, combine 2 cups broccoli florets and/or chopped or long sliced stalks with
a small amount of oil (1 tablespoon of olive or sesame) and sauté for two or
three minutes, then add a small amount of broth or water, cover the pan, and let
steam until crisp and tender (about two minutes).
- To steam
broccoli, place it in a covered steamer basket over boiling water for five to
seven minutes.
- Season cooked (steamed or boiled) broccoli with
extra-virgin olive oil, lemon juice, balsamic vinegar, or a light sprinkling of
hand-shredded Parmesan or Asiago cheese.
Kitchen Tricks
- For the right balance of humidity and oxygen, store broccoli in an open
plastic bag in the refrigerator crisper. To help prevent mold growth, do not
wash broccoli before storing.
- Peel stalks before cooking to make them
more tender, but preserve the nutrients by only peeling a thin layer.
- Broccoli florets cook faster than stalks, so split the stalks in half
before cooking.
- Store cooked broccoli in a tightly covered container in
the refrigerator for up to two or three days.
Chef Cary Neff is the president of the consulting firm Culinary Innovations and
the author of the New York Times bestseller Conscious Cuisine (Sourcebooks,
2002).
For details on how to prepare Broccoli Salad, Broccoli Tofu Scramble and
Broccoli Soup, see the Web Extras! at the top right of this page.
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Broccoli
This superstar vegetable helps fight cancer, reduces the risk of heart disease
and osteoporosis, and even helps prevent birth defects.
By Cary Neff | Inspired Kitchen Department, June 2009 |
Food Basics
Nutritional Know-How
Eat Up!
Kitchen Tricks
Whoever told you to “eat your broccoli” had your best interests in mind.
Broccoli is filled with disease-fighting nutrients. And when cooked properly —
or creatively prepared raw — it’s scrumptious, too.
Food Basics (Back to Top)
Broccoli originated in Italy, and like turnips, kohlrabi,
cabbage, Brussels sprouts, kale, collard greens and cauliflower, it is a
cruciferous vegetable, or brassica. Its edible parts include the leaves, crunchy
stems and soft clusters of tiny green flower buds called florets. When
purchasing, select broccoli with tightly closed buds, crisp leaves, and a deep
emerald color or purplish tinge. When cooked, broccoli may release sulfur
compounds, creating an unpleasant smell but leaving flavor unaffected.
Nutritional Know-How (Back to Top)
Broccoli contains sulforaphane, a phytonutrient that
helps the body’s detoxification enzymes eliminate abnormal cells, slow tumor
growth and reduce the risk of developing intestinal polyps (which usually
precede colon cancer). It also helps support healthy functioning (think
toxin-filtering) of the liver. Other nutrients in broccoli help the body repair
sun-damaged skin, reduce the risk of heart disease and cataracts, prevent or
delay osteoporosis, support the immune system, reduce the risk of birth defects,
and fight prostate, ovarian and bladder cancer. One 3⁄4-cup serving of
steamed broccoli contains more vitamin C than a typical orange, and it’s also
high in vitamins K and A and calcium. Broccoli boasts numerous anti-inflammatory
properties, and its dark-green leaves are rich in beta-carotene.
Eat Up! (Back to Top)
Boiling broccoli can cause significant nutrient loss, and it
rarely produces optimal flavor. If eating it raw doesn’t appeal to you, you can
lightly steam or sauté it, or roast it (often the best-tasting option). When
cooked, broccoli should maintain its bright green color (pale green broccoli is
a sign that it has been overcooked). - To roast broccoli,
first lightly toss florets and small, evenly cut stalks in extra-virgin olive
oil. Season with sea salt, and slivered or minced garlic. In a 475-degree F
oven, roast for three to five minutes, then turn over and roast an additional
three minutes until slightly browned at the edges.
- Add broccoli florets and peeled, chopped stalks to stir-fries. To
cook, combine 2 cups broccoli florets and/or chopped or long sliced stalks with
a small amount of oil (1 tablespoon of olive or sesame) and sauté for two or
three minutes, then add a small amount of broth or water, cover the pan, and let
steam until crisp and tender (about two minutes).
- To steam
broccoli, place it in a covered steamer basket over boiling water for five to
seven minutes.
- Season cooked (steamed or boiled) broccoli with
extra-virgin olive oil, lemon juice, balsamic vinegar, or a light sprinkling of
hand-shredded Parmesan or Asiago cheese.
Kitchen Tricks (Back to Top)
- For the right balance of humidity and oxygen, store broccoli in an open
plastic bag in the refrigerator crisper. To help prevent mold growth, do not
wash broccoli before storing.
- Peel stalks before cooking to make them
more tender, but preserve the nutrients by only peeling a thin layer.
- Broccoli florets cook faster than stalks, so split the stalks in half
before cooking.
- Store cooked broccoli in a tightly covered container in
the refrigerator for up to two or three days.
Chef Cary Neff is the president of the consulting firm Culinary Innovations and
the author of the New York Times bestseller Conscious Cuisine (Sourcebooks,
2002).
For details on how to prepare Broccoli Salad, Broccoli Tofu Scramble and
Broccoli Soup, see the Web Extras! at the top right of this page.
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