Probiotics sounds like an exotic name, which you hear doctors, health fanatics all talking about it. Well, many spend hugs amount of money to buy it from chemists, while it can be easily without much cost found in our own kitchen ! What are probiotics? Our stomach has billions of bacteria living naturally in it.
Some of these are good, and some bad for us. The good ones help keep our
digestion humming, boost the immunity and keep diseases away. The bad
ones, do the exact opposite! Our lifestyle determines their ratio (good
vs bad). Stress, wrong food, too much alcohol or too many medications
can mess with this ratio.
In the beginning, this skewed ration
shows up as maybe a bloated body, a constipated tummy, fatigue… but
slowly the problems add up. This is where probiotics come in – they help
rectify the balance in the favour of good bacteria.
What’s a Good Probiotic Food?
One that contains millions and
millions of live bacteria which join hands with the good bugs already
present in our gut and boost our gut health.
Where Do You Find Them?
Lots
of exotic-sounding foods have been doing the rounds and are being heard
repeatedly in cleverly constructed marketing messages. These include blue cheese, kefir, tempeh, miso soup or paste, kimchi,
sauerkraut and more. These are all natural probiotics – which is a good
thing – but NONE of these are indigenous to India. They all belong to
different countries and cultures worldwide, and so are good for them.
They can be good for us too, provided they were easily available here,
but they aren’t. And the whole idea of eating probiotic foods is to be
able to replenish the good germs on a regular basis to prevent damage to
health. Also, the gut flora of a specific community is usually well
adapted to the environment of their intestine, so local foods and
bacteria work far better.
Solution
Our traditional food plate was chock-a-block with
probiotic foods; we just never realised it. In fact, unfortunately –
over time – we got out of the habit of eating these. Time for a revisit,
I should think.
Curd
Home made curd is a rich source of
probiotics, as powerful strains of probiotic are found in yogurt like
lactobacillus and bifidobacteria. Most packaged yoghurt may not contain
enough ‘active and live’ cultures (of bacteria), so it makes sense to
check labels carefully, or set your own curd.
Pickles
Pickles
are the most underrated Indian food around. In fact, it is often
maligned as unhealthy but that is far from true. Not only does it add
taste (as most of these are made by fermenting vegetables and special
fruits), they are loaded with probiotics. Time to go back to making
small lots of pickles and chutneys at home and eating some with every
meal.
Fermented Veggies
Fermented vegetables which were
traditionally part of a plate are missing now. One serving of fermented
vegetables can contain 10 trillion colony-forming units of beneficial
bacteria.
Southern Cuisines
Most
dishes in a South Indian cuisine are rich sources of probiotics.
Buttermilk, idli, dosa, appam, uttapam, adai are all made by
fermenting rice and lentils, which makes them high in live cultures of
the good bacteria. The fermentation process creates the perfect
environment for growth of good bacteria. Plus, they also increase the
absorption of vital minerals from the gastrointestinal tract, thus
preventing mineral deficiencies. Once the batter is fermented, the B-complex vitamins are enhanced and also it is easy to digest them !
Kanji
Kanji, a
traditional drink made with black carrots, mustard seeds, sea salt and
water is fermented for a week – and is thus, loaded with good bacteria.
It is the best immune booster you can have. Then, there are some lesser known regional probiotic foods that are important to know about. Some
examples are fermented radish root pieces called sinki from the north
east, a gundruk soup used by Bhutial women of Arunachal Pradesh made
with leaves of mustard, radish and cauliflower, fermented rai (cures
stomach pain and gas trouble). There’s also pakhala bhaat from Odisha –
also called panta bhaat in West Bengal – a rice porridge where leftover
rice is covered with water and left overnight to ferment. A similar
preparation in rural Tamil Nadu is called pazhedhu saadham ( left-over rice). Fermented
fish – very popular in the northeastern states, kullu, a fermented drink
made with buttermilk and wheat from Himachal Pradesh, radbi, a drink
made with flour of barley, pearl millet, corn or soybean, and country
buttermilk from Rajasthan... the list is endless. Dhokla is Gujarat, which is nice soft and spongy steamed dish made with lentils and semolina/ rice.
THIS IS ONLY FOR INFORMATION, ALWAYS CONSULT YOU PHYSICIAN BEFORE
HAVING ANY PARTICULAR FOOD/ MEDICATION/EXERCISE/OTHER REMEDIES.
PS-
THOSE INTERESTED IN
RECIPES ARE FREE TO
VIEW MY BLOG-
https://gseasyrecipes.blogspot.com/
FOR INFO ABOUT KNEE
REPLACEMENT, YOU CAN VIEW MY BLOG-
https:// kneereplacement-stickclub.blogspot.com/
FOR
CROCHET DESIGNS
https://gscrochetdesigns.blogspot.com
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home