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07 Jul 2023
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Nightshade vegetables and arthritis? While some suggest that nightshade vegetables worsen arthritis symptoms, scientific evidence supporting this claim is lacking. Restricting these vegetables without valid reasons may unnecessarily narrow dietary options. Overall, the focus should be on diversity.Aubergines are abundant and diverse in bioactive compounds, particularly:
Nicotine?! Aubergines and other nightshade vegetables contain many edible soft seeds that contain tiny amounts of nicotinoid alkaloids. Nicotine from food sources like Solanaceae vegetables was recently linked to a lower risk of Parkinson’s disease, because of potential effects on dopaminergic function in a way that decreases disease progression.
Improving blood pressure and psychological state: One small trial found that intake of eggplant powder at a dose equivalent to 22 g of raw eggplant per day improved blood pressure and psychological state in 100 participants. The authors suggested that acetylcholine in eggplant could lower blood pressure by suppressing sympathetic nervous activity through receptors in the digestive system.
Research continues: High-quality studies on the effects of aubergines are lacking. We need more research to get the full picture.
Overall, aubergines add colour and diversity to your meals. One portion is one-third of an aubergine. Plus, they can be turned into many delicious dishes.
Chromolithograph, c. 1870, after H. Briscoe.
Aubergine or eggplant? Same plant, different names. And its scientific name, Solanum melongena, comes from the fruit’s old name ‘mela insane’ - meaning ‘mad apple.’ (Kew Gardens)
Another berry-vegetable! Aubergine is part of the nightshade family (Solanaceae) and cousin to potatoes, tomatoes, and peppers. It’s another vegetable that defies classification as it is botanically considered a berry. We eat the plant’s large, egg-shaped fruit that comes in a variety of colours, shapes and sizes, including purple, red, pink, yellowish and even striped.
Elephants and Aubergines: The wild ancestors of the aubergine plant stretched far and wide across eastern Africa around two million years ago. The seeds dispersed because of elephants and impala roaming widely, eating the fruits and dispersing the seeds.
Globetrotting: The plant then dispersed to tropical Asia and western Africa. Later, it was first domesticated by human populations in multiple regions of Southeast Asia. The earliest record of the eggplant documented in ancient Chinese literature was in a work from 59 BC.
To today: The plant evolved into the different varieties we eat today due to local conditions and farmers selecting for specific traits like shape, yield, lack of prickles or colour. (Martínez-Ispizua et al. 2021)
Around the world
Plus, French ratatouille, Middle Eastern Baba Ganoush, Indian Baingan bharta, Chinese Yu Xiang Eggplant and many more!
3 ways to make the most of your aubergines
4 recipes to try this week
History: Natural History Museum – Martínez-Ispizua et al. 2021 – Kew Gardens
Human studies & composition: Ma et al. 2020 – Nishimura et al. Nutrients. 2019 – Sharma et al. Applied sciences. 2021 – Wang et al. Journal of Food Composition and Analysis. 2023.
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