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    Is Seaweed the Next Big Superfood?

    The other day as I walked through Whole Foods, I felt like I was in an aquarium. Everywhere I looked I saw seaweed! Seaweed snacks are the new coconut water, and varieties like wakame are popular in prepared dishes such as chilled seaweed salad.

    It seems that sea veggies are a hot new superfood, with reported benefits ranging from heart protection to weight loss. Currently researchers are studying potentially protective compounds in eight species of seaweed from Ireland and Canada that may help reduce blood clots and hardening of the arteries , two major risk factors for heart disease. Another recent report published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry reviewed almost 100 previous studies and concluded that some seaweed proteins work just like blood pressure meds. And in animal research a component in brown seaweed was shown to help rats burn more body fat.

    RELATED: The 12 Best Power Foods for Women

    Research aside, sea vegetables , including kelp, nori, hijiki, wakame and others are rich sources of iodine and one of the few sources of this important mineral just a quarter of a cup packs a whopping 275 percent of the daily value. Too little iodine can trigger hypo or hyperthyroidism, fatigue, weight gain, and depression. And they're also a good source of magnesium, which can improve sleep and alleviate hot flashes in women going through menopause.

    To reap the benefits try out a dried seaweed snack, such as Annie Chun's. The sesame variety is made from just seaweed, canola oil, sesame oil and salt (so no artificial extras), and 10 sheets contain just 30 calories and 70 mg of sodium. Plus they're portable, and you can crumble them as a topping for a garden salad or stir fry.


    RELATED: Stay Focused: The Best Foods for Your Brain

    Other fun ways to eat more seaweed include:

    • Make a wakame, cucumber side dish dressed with brown rice vinegar and fresh grated ginger
    • Whip up a seaweed pizza ‚brush extra-virgin olive oil or sesame oil on a whole grain flatbread crust and top with garlic, onions, fresh sliced tomato and nori
    • Start your day with seaweed - add julienned nori, sesame seeds , green onions, shredded carrots and sliced mushrooms to one whole organic egg and two whites or scrambled organic tofu
    • Make a side of seaweed salad a staple in every sushi order
    Do you like seaweed? Tell us! What's your favorite way to eat it?


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    42 comments

    • rocco  •  6 months ago
      how good is it now after that huge Billiton oil spill?
    • Hank Azaria  •  6 months ago
      Seaweed doesnt all come from Japan folks
      • MQ 6 months ago
        Japan actually imports it from other countries., you're right Hank.
      • nemin.rm 6 months ago
        heck if I know where all the seaweed comes from, the packaged kind of course, but you dont need to be in japan to find irradiated ocean products anymore. Were pulling them out of vancouver BC. I was told this amazing thing people dont seem to know.. the ocean is in constant motion.. Wow eh? lol duh
    • MOA  •  6 months ago
      Why does everyone on here think that seaweed only comes from Japan??????????
    • indigoflame96  •  6 months ago
      Like most things, North Americans are the last to "discover" things... Eastern cultures have been eating seaweed for centuries with numerous benefits.
    • cj469  •  6 months ago
      grew up on seaweed. Love it.
    • Stacy A  •  6 months ago
      I have been eating sushi and seaweed for 40 years...it is the best...
      • Itchy 6 months ago
        You're probably mercury poisoned 40 times the normal intake. Excess of everything leads to serious consequences. All saltwater fish is poisoned.
    • fujicrt  •  6 months ago
      spinach is good also lots of iodine as well, less salt
    • wayout66  •  6 months ago
      I LOVE seaweed, and I do happen to order a seaweed salad and seaweed sushi with every sushi outing. I love to eat nori strips as well, I suppose it could be an acquired taste, but I have to say it packs a punch of goodness and I always feel good after eating the stuff. And that's not jumping on any trend, it's been part of my diet since the late 80's...
    • EC  •  6 months ago
      Who else read the title and sang-thought "what's the greatest superfood under the sea..."
    • Toan  •  6 months ago
      eat everything: veggies and fruits benefit your organs
    • James HEBBARD  •  6 months ago
      " SO I GUESS BIG MACS ARE OUT OF THE QUESTION ? "
      • wayout66 6 months ago
        I eat those, too, I'm not necessarily a health food nut...mmmm, Big Macs...
    • The KNiGHT of SWoRDS  •  6 months ago
      I hate to poop on the parade... but the oceans are spewing forth all the effluent we have been dumping into them since the civilized world came into existence.The major contributions of the first world war,and the subsequent dumping of toxic waste, the barges of "recycled" construction materials, and needless to say the "single use" plastic bags, drink bottles, and consumer packaging.There is no reason not to be educated about the bodies of water on this planet, or what we have done to them in the last 100 years, and most certainly no-one has an excuse not to know about the oil industry disasters that have befallen the oceans.
      I am not saying NOT to consume fish, shellfish, or seaweed....I am just saying that if you think it is the be all end all in terms of health...just remember that it is a product of its environment. The oceans are toxic, and getting worse...Just think about it for a moment...imagine if you will taking a 50 gallon barrel and dumping all you garbage in it, along with some live prawns, a few halibut, some sea-grasses, wait a few weeks and fish out your dinner.This is an extreme exaggeration, but it serves to spawn a mental picture, and hopefully to raise awareness amongst us all that we are what we eat.
      • Sneaks 6 months ago
        oh come on, you forgot the Nuclear waste from the japan devistation.

        great comment, however.
      • ragtop_ca 6 months ago
        You are right Knight of Swords. Just take a stroll on the Pacific beach of the Baja Peninsula and you will be gobsmacked at the amount of filth that washes up. In that same area, raw sewage flows into the Pacific by concrete spillways. Better to eat foods from Canada's lakes and rivers.
    • pablo  •  6 months ago
      ok, so if you are highly allergic to fish like i am, then what?!
    • Odoyle  •  6 months ago
      I know of another ancient idea that counteracts obesity................stop eating like a hog!!
    • EM  •  6 months ago
      The "new" coconut water? Gee I'm sorry, I must've missed out on that. Here, I didn't even know coconut water was trendy, and now (apparantly), these media mavens want us to rush on to something else as the hot new trend, this seaweed business.

      I don't know 'bout the rest of you? But i'm sick of all this trendy stuff. Trends in fashion, trends in exercise, trends in vegetables, trends in the right TV show, etc. What crap.

      I'm suspecting that, in countries where seaweed is a natural (and non-trendy!) part of the diet, they've been eating it for thousands of years. And long after it fades away as just another 'in' food over here in numskull-land (ie, North America), they will continue to eat it over there. Quietly. Without hubub. Without flashy advertising-generating media articles.

      Like this one.
    • circling_elk@yahoo.ca  •  6 months ago
      Is it mercury prone like fish?I suspect so.Seaweed takes heavy metals out of your body,particularly kombu.Also counter reacts radiation.Interesting that this comes about
      since the disaster in Japan.Radiation is not only in our oceans,it's in our atmosphere.So it looks like we'll glow in the dark whether we eat seaweed or not .Anyway I soak it overnight and add it to miso soup.My fave is arame,kombu and wakame.
    • Pj B  •  6 months ago
      lots available in north america
    • J  •  6 months ago
      From Japan--the Japanese know how to eat it properly (and seafood); north Americans know how to eat hamburgers and hotdogs, translated as "rotgut and fatpiles."
    • Brad  •  6 months ago
      Mmmmm, Irradiated food yummy.
    • Gary  •  6 months ago
      Nothing new there. Some old hippies got me started on eating dried seaweed when I was very young. If you like salty snacks you will be munching on it daily like I do.
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