article
29 Feb 2024
To your meals, celeriac brings:
✔️ Dietary fibres – which improve gut microbiota diversity and digestive health.
✔️ Potassium – which is involved in many essential functions, like the maintenance of normal blood pressure.
✔️ Vitamin K and C
✔️ Flavonoids such as apigenin and kaempferol.
Apigenin’s anticancer properties: It’s a type of plant flavone that has caught the eye of many researchers due to its numerous valuable properties, including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer effects. Research found that a higher intake of apigenin and other flavonoids was linked to a reduced risk of certain cancers. You can also find it in chamomile, parsley, and artichokes.
One of your quality carbs: As a root vegetable, celeriac provides carbohydrates alongside fibres, vitamins, minerals and beneficial plant compounds. While potatoes contain 1.8 grams of fibre, celeriac takes the lead with 3.7 grams per 100 grams – making it a great addition to your carb sources.
More to come… A few trials are looking at celery extract but we didn’t find studies using celeriac or celery root. More research is needed to explore its specific health benefits.
Around the world
At the Doctor’s Kitchen, we love its versatility and subtle nutty flavour that tastes like a cross between celery and parsley. Plus, it’s a real team player, soaking up and enhancing other flavours in soups, stews, and casseroles. We’ll keep having fun with it in the months ahead!
5 ways to enjoy
Bruznican et al. Front. Plant Sci. 2020
Kooti et al. J Evid Based Complementary Altern Med. 2017
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