09/20/2018 / By Jessica Dolores
Your head is spinning. Your mouth is watery and there’s blood in your stool. You can’t stand the pain in your stomach and you’re shaking from fever.
You wonder what happened – until you remember eating the leftover food that’s been sitting on the kitchen table for hours on end.
You rush to the doctor who tells you it’s food poisoning.
A new study shows that you could have spared yourself this agony had you included a generous amount of cloves and rosemary in your diet.
The study, funded by the Beijing Academy of Food Sciences, aimed to find out if these spices can keep the growth of micro bacteria in check and prevent cell-damaging lipid oxidation. In the testing phase, researchers applied rosemary and clove extracts on raw chicken meat and found that clove extracts contain ingredients that fight infection and disease. While rosemary is just as effective, the best health benefits occurred when these two spice extracts joined forces to beat the infection.
Cloves are more than a staple in the diet of people living in the Southeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, and parts of East Africa. This healthy spice is the body’s ally in fighting disease. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, 100 g of cloves contains 56 g of carbohydrates, 6 g of protein, as well as lipids, energy, and dietary fiber. It is also rich in calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorous, potassium, sodium and zinc. You won’t go wrong with the amounts of Vitamin C, thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, folate, vitamins B6, B12, A, E, D and K in this nutrient-rich extract.
Some of the ways cloves keep you strong and healthy include:
Rosemary is just as healthy. This herb not only smells and tastes good, but it also promotes health when consistently present in one’s diet. Here are some of the many benefits of rosemary.
Learn even more benefits from using herbs by going to Herbs.news today.
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