Posted on 12/30/2009 10:21:09 AM PST by Graybeard58
As a child, Kristine Hinrichs of Milwaukee routinely choked down boiled cabbage so she would be allowed to leave the dinner table. It wasn't until Hinrichs grew up and left home that she made a startling discovery: Cabbage was nutritious -- and could also be delicious.
It's not easy giving certain foods a second chance. But if you're looking to add some nutritional powerhouses to your diet, as Hinrichs was, food experts say it might be worth revisiting dishes you've despised. Our taste sensations, interpretation and appreciation can change over time, said Dr. Donald Hensrud, a Mayo Clinic weight management specialist. There's also some conditioning that goes on; we learn to like certain foods, and we get used to them over time.
Take milk. Years ago, we typically drank it whole and complained that skim milk tasted like water. But skim grew on us. Now when you go back to whole milk, it tastes like cream, Hensrud said.
You may also have an aversion to foods that weren't prepared right or, like cabbage, have a sulfurous odor. But it's possible that if you don't get that smell, you find something like broccoli more pleasant, said Marci Pelchat of the Monell Center, a Philadelphia-based taste and smell research institute.
Hensrud doesn't recommend forcing anything down. But he does think most of us underestimate our ability to change. Unless you're a supertaster [--] someone born with a heightened sense of taste -- consider experimenting with the following polarizing foods.
Sardines
Turnoffs: Strong, fishy taste. Tiny bones. Can be packed in tomato sauce. Reputation as a frugality food.
Turn-ons: High in vitamin D and loaded with omega-3 fatty acids, which protect your heart and brain. Lots of protein, calcium and selenium. Low on the marine food chain so toxins such as mercury don't accumulate. Inexpensive. Portable when canned.
How to eat them: Avoid sardines packed in vegetable oil, which is high in pro-inflammatory omega-6 fatty acids. Try a squeeze of lemon, toasted red chile, extra virgin olive oil and mixed green herbs over garlicky al dente whole wheat fettuccine, LaPuma said. Or buy the kind dressed up with mustard or pesto.
Cabbage
]Turnoffs: When overcooked, produces the smell of rotten eggs. Too much cabbage may make you gassy.
Turn-ons: One cup of shredded, boiled cabbage has just 33 calories but has 4 filling grams of fiber. Loaded with phytochemicals, vitamins and minerals. May reduce your risk of cancer and has a protective effect on the brain. Fermented cabbage (sauerkraut and kimchi) is a non-dairy source of probiotics, or bacteria that have a health benefit. The lactic acid in sauerkraut may help you absorb iron.
How to eat it: Can be steamed, fried, boiled, braised or baked. Use it in corned beef and cabbage, soups and stews, and cold dishes such as coleslaw, said registered dietitian Dave Grotto, a spokesman for the American Dietetic Association. Cut fresh cabbage and sprinkle with lemon.
Tomatoes
Turnoffs: Contain a slimy, jellylike substance around the seeds; thin skin, grainy pulp and seeds. Sweetness and acidity can vary, depending on the variety and how early they were picked. (The longer a tomato matures on the vine, the higher the sugar content is.)
Turn-ons: Lycopene-rich (red) tomatoes can help reduce your risk for heart disease and certain cancers, including pancreatic and prostate, said LaPuma. Cooked tomatoes [--] including canned tomatoes and paste, juice, tomato soup and ketchup [--] contain up to eight times more available lycopene than raw tomatoes. Excellent source of vitamins A, C and K, and a good source of potassium, fiber and other phytonutrients.
How to eat them: Eating tomatoes with fat helps the body absorb their lycopene. The whole tomato has the greatest health benefits, so get the tomato paste products with peels, said LaPuma. Organic ketchup contains three times more lycopene than non-organic ketchup, said LaPuma. Use ketchup with burgers to help offset the carcinogenic compounds created when meat is charred.
Broccoli
Turnoffs: Sulfureous smell. Famously disliked by President George H.W. Bush.
Turn-ons: An abundance of antioxidants makes broccoli one of the healthiest vegetables you can eat. Aside from its anti-cancer properties such as sulforaphane, broccoli is a nutritional powerhouse that contains vitamins A, C and K, as well as folate and fiber. Has antibacterial properties that kill Helicobacter pylori, bacteria that cause ulcers and play a role in stomach cancer.
How to eat it: Use it in dips, casseroles, soups, lasagna, stir fry and salads, suggested chef Dana Jacobi, author of 10 best-selling cookbooks. Or try it on a crudite platter, on pizza, tossed with pasta, pureed as a side dish, added to frittatas and quiche. Chop up leftover cooked broccoli and add it to chili, sloppy joes, soups and other dishes when you reheat them, she wrote in The 12 Best Foods.
Beets
Turnoffs: Earthy flavor, slippery texture, can turn urine a startling pink color (a phenomenon called beeturia). Dissed by President Barack Obama and excluded from the White House garden.
Turn-ons: An excellent liver tonic and blood purifier. Beets have both betaine and folate, which work to reduce homocystein, a naturally occurring amino acid that can be harmful to blood vessels, said nutrition expert Jonny Bowden in his book The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth. High in potassium, which is also important for heart health. Contains the most sugar of any vegetable, yet is low in calories.
How to eat them: Baked, broiled, steamed or shredded raw and added to salads. Borscht is a traditional Russian beet soup. The leaves have even more nutritional value than the roots.
Brussels sprouts
Turnoffs: Resemble tiny cabbages. Parents or grandparents cooked them into oblivion. Sulfur content gives them an unappetizing odor.
Turn-ons: Has a higher concentration of glucosinolates, a type of compound believed to have cancer-fighting properties, than any other plants in the cruciferous vegetable family. An excellent source of vitamins C and K and a very good source of folate, vitamin A, fiber, potassium, and vitamin B6 and B1, said Dr. John LaPuma, a chef and the medical director for the Santa Barbara Institute for Medical Nutrition and Healthy Weight.
How to eat them: Trim the sprouts, then toss with olive oil, salt and crushed garlic. Roast in a 400 degree oven for about 30 minutes until tender. Use as little water as possible when boiling.
Licorice
Turnoffs: Strong, tart taste and smell.
Turn-ons: Licorice root -- the herb, not the candy -- is known for having a soothing effect on mucous membranes in the throat, lungs and bronchial tubes. It can also be used to treat everything from athlete's foot to ulcers, according to James Duke, the former chief of the Medicinal Plant Resources Laboratory at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
How to eat it: Buy it as an herb and add it as a sweetener to aromatic teas, suggested Duke, the author of The Green Pharmacy Guide to Healing Foods. But long-term use has side effects; don't use it regularly for longer than six weeks, and don't take it if you're pregnant or under medical care.
I even like Sardines:
“Four years old.
Strapped into a high chair.
Forced to sit there for HOURS until I finished my saurkraut”
I remember that well. Mine wasn’t saurkraut, it was milk that we had every meal. I hate milk to this day. I love all other kinds of dairy products though.
you can eat hash? :^)
Durian - I like it. Others have slightly different opinions:
The unusual flavour and odour of the fruit have prompted many people to express diverse and passionate views ranging from deep appreciation to intense disgust. Writing in 1856, the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace provides a much-quoted description of the flavour of the durian:
While Wallace cautions that “the smell of the ripe fruit is certainly at first disagreeable”, later descriptions by westerners are more graphic. British novelist Anthony Burgess writes that eating durian is “like eating sweet raspberry blancmange in the lavatory.” Chef Andrew Zimmern compares the taste to “completely rotten, mushy onions.” Anthony Bourdain, while a lover of durian, relates his encounter with the fruit as thus: “Its taste can only be described as...indescribable, something you will either love or despise. ...Your breath will smell as if you’d been French-kissing your dead grandmother.” Travel and food writer Richard Sterling says: Other comparisons have been made with the civet, sewage, stale vomit, skunk spray and used surgical swabs.
Dice two or three cloves of garlic.
Slise up cabage thin.
Two table spoons of Olive oil in the bottom of a deep pot. Get it hot enough to brown garlic.
After garlic is brown add cabage. Stir often enough to keep the cabage from burning.
Add a tablespoon or two of curry powder.
YUMMY
I hated them too. My mother and grandmother turned them into a noxious mush. However, now my son and I fight over who gets the last one. My wife steams them with butter and lemon juice and they are delicious!
20 years in the Navy, 10 of them spent on aircraft carriers.
You put almost anything in front of me, I can eat it.
Except chili mac. It’s not that it tastes bad, i just ate soooooooo much chili mac on ship I don’t ever want to see it again.
caviar is the yuckiest food on earth, and you have to pay extra for the really bad stuff.
I LOVE beets, cabbage, broccoli, and can even tolerate brussels sprouts if they’re cooked correctly.
But do I hate sardines & licorice!!
The oven-baked recipe for Brussel sprouts is heaven only I bake mine for about 45 minutes. Crispy on the outside and creamy in the middle. But, you still have to like them to enjoy it.
Good luck getting milk from that one.
'La bonne cuisine est la base du véritable bonheur.' - Auguste Escoffier
(Good food is the foundation of genuine happiness.)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
Hmmm...interesting. Just fried till crispy, I assume.
I’ll have to try that.
WOW....That DOES sound yummy! Think i’ll try that one!
Strapped into a high chair.
Forced to sit there for HOURS until I finished my saurkraut.
A little older, but I had the same thing happen to me with canned peas - hours at the table refusing to eat just one.
Still won't eat them.
I was traumatized by peas as a small child ;)
Sushi is my favorite...particularly uni, ikura, and unagi !
My father was that way about rice for at least 30 years after WWII and Korea. He was in the Navy and claimed they ate rice morning, noon and night. It was only when he was in his 60s that he began to eat rice again.
Oatmeal...I literally retch if anyone is eating it in my presence.
Don’t know of a food I don’t like :) wishing my kids had inherited the gene :(
I eat all of it, including 2% milk.
I was, once upon a time.....drinking fresh, whole milk, milked from my Mama’s old Betsy. :-)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.