Article 5N23X "It Could Feed the World": Amaranth, a Health Trend 8,000 Years Old

"It Could Feed the World": Amaranth, a Health Trend 8,000 Years Old

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martyb
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upstart writes:

It could feed the world': amaranth, a health trend 8,000 years old that survived colonization:

Just over 10 years ago, a small group of Indigenous Guatemalan farmers visited Beata Tsosie-Pena's stucco home in northern New Mexico. In the arid heat, the visitors, mostly Maya Achi women from the forested Guatemalan town of Rabinal, showed Tsosie-Pena how to plant the offering they had brought with them: amaranth seeds.

Back then, Tsosie-Pena had just recently [be]come interested in environmental justice amid frustration at the ecological challenges facing her native Santa Clara Pueblo - an Indigenous North American community just outside the New Mexico town of Espanola, which is downwind from the nuclear facilities that built the atomic bomb. Tsosie-Pena had begun studying permaculture and other Indigenous agricultural techniques. Today, she coordinates the environmental health and justice program at Tewa Women United, where she maintains a hillside public garden that's home to the descendants of those first amaranth seeds she was given more than a decade ago.

They are now six-foot-tall perennials with flowering red plumes and chard-like leaves. But during that first visit in 2009, the plants were just pinhead-size seeds. Tsosie-Pena and her guests spent the day planting, winnowing, cooking and eating them - toasting the seeds in a skillet to be served over milk or mixed into honey - and talking about their shared histories: how colonization had separated them from their traditional foods and how they were reclaiming their relationship with the land.

Since the 1970s, amaranth has become a billion-dollar food - and cosmetic - product. Health conscious shoppers embracing ancient grains will find it in growing numbers of grocery stores in the US, or in snack bars across Mexico, and, increasingly, in Europe and the Asia Pacific. As a complete protein with all nine essential amino acids, amaranth is a highly nutritious source of manganese, magnesium, phosphorus, iron and antioxidants that may improve brain function and reduce inflammation.

This is a plant that could feed the world," said Tsosie-Pena.

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