Having a curry once or twice a week could stave off Alzheimer's disease, it has been claimed. Skip related content
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Curry a day could keep dementia away .Curcumin, an ingredient in turmeric, which is used widely in Indian cuisine, is believed to prevent changes in the brain by blocking the spread of amyloid plaques - toxic protein deposits thought to play a key role in Alzheimer's.
Members of the Royal College of Psychiatrists were told at their annual meeting in Liverpool that laboratory and animal studies have already produced strong evidence that curry combats dementia.
A clinical trial is now under way in California to test the effects of curcumin on a group of Alzheimer's patients.
Indian-born American expert Professor Murali Doraiswamy said: "You can modify a mouse so that at about 12 months its brain is riddled with plaques. If you feed it a curcumin-rich diet it dissolves these plaques. The same diet prevented younger mice from forming new plaques.
"The next step is to test curcumin on human amyloid plaque formation using newer brain scans and there are plans for that."
Prof Doraiswarmy said rates of Alzheimer's are known to be low in Asian communities with turmeric-rich diets. One study in Singapore showed that regular curry eaters were at least half as likely to develop the disease as people who avoided curry.
Curries from southern India are richest in the spice, with it mostly found in Indian dishes with a "gravy" - not necessarily the hottest ones - including chicken and lamb tikkas.
"If you're not a fan of curry you can try putting mustard on your food," said Prof Doraiswamy. "I'm not a big fan of supplements in general but if they're from a responsible store then that might be another way to go."
He continued: "Studies looking at populations show that people who eat a curry meal two or three times a week seem to have a lower risk for dementia.
"Those studies seem to show that you need only consume what is part of the normal diet - but the research studies are testing higher doses to see if they can maximise the effect. It would be equivalent of going on a curry spree for a week."
Curcumin's effects are not well understood but it is believed to reduce inflammation - an immune reaction thought to play a key role in Alzheimer's - in a number of different ways, he said. It is thought to inhibit an enzyme called cox-2 which is also the target of anti-inflammatory drugs.
Prof Doraiswarmy added: "It is considered one of the three or four essential spices that are good for longevity. I eat curry at least three or four times a week and even when I make western dishes I often use curry spices to flavour them."
Meanwhile, an Essex restaurant claims it has created the world's hottest curry.
The Polash Restaurant in Shoebury has made the Polash Meltdown - which measures more than 1 million on the Scoville Heat Units scale - to celebrate its 30th birthday.
Anyone wishing to try it must first sign a disclaimer.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/4/20090603/tuk ... a1618.html
Curry a day could keep dementia away
- angry pirate
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1 million on the Scoville
Roll on 093001022015
To be honest you can use Tumeric in lots of stuff, not just curries.
Try marinating some lamb with tumeric, cumin, paprika, chilli powder, mint, lemon and yoghurt, then chuck it on a griddle pan/barbecue and serve it with a nice salad, or maybe some cous cous etc.
Tumeric is a brilliant thing. Also, if you cut yourself then simply add some tumeric to the cut and it will stop the bleeding.
Lots of brilliant things you can do with Tumeric, not going to bother posting them all here but if anyone wants some inspriation then PM me.
Try marinating some lamb with tumeric, cumin, paprika, chilli powder, mint, lemon and yoghurt, then chuck it on a griddle pan/barbecue and serve it with a nice salad, or maybe some cous cous etc.
Tumeric is a brilliant thing. Also, if you cut yourself then simply add some tumeric to the cut and it will stop the bleeding.
Lots of brilliant things you can do with Tumeric, not going to bother posting them all here but if anyone wants some inspriation then PM me.
- OneForTheRoad
- Posts: 302
- Joined: Wed 13th Aug 2008 01:20 pm
Sounds very Moroccan. I love cooking and eating curries, no cooking sauce rubbish though all from scratch...Elnino wrote:To be honest you can use Tumeric in lots of stuff, not just curries.
Try marinating some lamb with tumeric, cumin, paprika, chilli powder, mint, lemon and yoghurt, then chuck it on a griddle pan/barbecue and serve it with a nice salad, or maybe some cous cous etc.
I like stuff