Which turkey topper, muffin mix-in, and fruit-punch staple can help keep your ticker in top shape?
It's the ruby-red cranberry. The fruit is chock-full of flavonoids that give heart-disease risk factors a one-two punch, attacking inflammation and cholesterol. Here's what else cranberries can do for you.
Flavonoids Fever
Cranberries may help raise HDL (good) cholesterol and thwart plaque-building oxidation of the bad kind (LDL). Not only that, but some studies also link the almighty cranberry's killer flavonoid combination with cancer-fighting properties. And cranberry flavonols -- particularly quercetin -- appear to help quell inflammation. (Here's another red fruit packed with flavonols.)
For All Seasons
So don't forget this tangy tongue teaser after the holidays. Load up on dried cranberries to mix into your granola, top fish with fresh cranberry relish, and bake fresh cranberries into cookies, muffins, and breads. You can also treat yourself to a glass or two of cranberry juice (choose diet varieties for less sugar and fewer calories). The bonus with the juice: It may help ward off urinary tract infections. (Try this homemade trail mix with dried cranberries and apricots.)
Did You Know?
Cranberries may help you battle these kinds of illnesses, too.
RealAge Benefit: Getting 31 milligrams of flavonoids a day can make your RealAge 3.2 years younger.
Take the RealAge Test
It's the ruby-red cranberry. The fruit is chock-full of flavonoids that give heart-disease risk factors a one-two punch, attacking inflammation and cholesterol. Here's what else cranberries can do for you.
Flavonoids Fever
Cranberries may help raise HDL (good) cholesterol and thwart plaque-building oxidation of the bad kind (LDL). Not only that, but some studies also link the almighty cranberry's killer flavonoid combination with cancer-fighting properties. And cranberry flavonols -- particularly quercetin -- appear to help quell inflammation. (Here's another red fruit packed with flavonols.)
For All Seasons
So don't forget this tangy tongue teaser after the holidays. Load up on dried cranberries to mix into your granola, top fish with fresh cranberry relish, and bake fresh cranberries into cookies, muffins, and breads. You can also treat yourself to a glass or two of cranberry juice (choose diet varieties for less sugar and fewer calories). The bonus with the juice: It may help ward off urinary tract infections. (Try this homemade trail mix with dried cranberries and apricots.)
Did You Know?
Cranberries may help you battle these kinds of illnesses, too.
RealAge Benefit: Getting 31 milligrams of flavonoids a day can make your RealAge 3.2 years younger.
Take the RealAge Test
