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The Power of Skin

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ImageBy Geoffrey R. Harris, MD

Growing out in the wild, even if it’s the wild of your backyard, plants must protect themselves from attack. They’re under constant assault from ultraviolet rays, pollution, and predators. It’s important that they have a first, powerful line of defense. Skin is that defense.

Whether it’s the skin of an apple, the peel of a grape, or the rind on an orange, this part of the fruit has a tremendous antioxidant ability that permits it to withstand the assaults of nature. The outer leaves of spinach and cabbage, for example, have the highest levels of vitamin C. One hundred grams of fresh apples with the skin contain about 142 milligrams of flavonoids, but the same amount of apples without the skin has only 97 milligrams of flavonoids. Quercetin—a common flavonoid with anti-inflammatory properties—is found only in the skins of apples, not in the flesh of the fruit. The antioxidant activity of 100 grams of apples without the skin is 55 percent of the activity of 100 grams of apples with skin. The skinless apples are about half as powerful. The papery brownish skins on almonds and peanuts are loaded with various bioactive polyphenols.

As a general rule, the greater the proportion of skin to interior fruit, the higher the antioxidant ability. For example, blueberries and cranberries are extraordinarily high in antioxidants. The rule holds true for tomatoes: the smaller the tomato—think cherry tomato—the higher its antioxidant ability. You can use that antioxidant power by simply eating the skin! Try to eat appropriate fruits and vegetables with the skin on. Of course, the skin is where the pesticides and potentially harmful bacteria reside, so a careful washing is mandatory. Don’t forget that juices with sediment on the bottom are the ones to choose. That sediment contains bits of skin and pulp and is a great source of antioxidants. You’ll notice that many organic juices as well as those that are 100 percent juice contain this sediment.
 
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