These Foods Will Make You Smile
The Modern American Diet—MAD—way of eating is throwing off our
bodies’ natural feel-good chemistry, resulting in a miserable, moody,
anxious, and agitated nation. Luckily, an instant jolt of happiness is
just a forkful of brain food away. People should be focusing on brain
foods and mood-promoting fats to best nurture happiness, says Drew
Ramsey, MD, coauthor (with Tyler Graham) of The Happiness Diet: A Nutritional Prescription for a Sharp Brain, Balanced Mood, and Lean, Energized Body.
“Just a few meals away from the modern American diet, and you’ll start
to feel benefits like better energy and a more stable mood,” explains
Dr. Ramsey. “The moment you make a better food choice you are instantly
building a better brain.”
1. Lemon Macaroons
Sugar is a known mood annihilator, but that doesn’t mean you have to completely give up on desserts. The authors of The Happiness Diet devised
a citrus-rich macaroon recipe chock-full of brain-healthy coconut, a
health food boasting medium-chain fats that fuel better moods. And the
lemon provides not just a burst of flavor, but also brain-protecting
flavonoids. Give their recipe for Mood-Boosting Lemon Macaroons a go
this weekend.
2. Pastured Eggs
Dr. Ramsey calls eggs the perfect food. They’re loaded with mood-promoting omega-3 fatty acids, zinc, B vitamins, and iodide, and they’ll keep you full and energized.
The problem is that these days, buying the best egg has become complicated, even for the savviest label sleuth. Egg carton claims promise all sorts of nutrients and living conditions for the laying hens, but many claims aren’t even regulated. The best egg for your brain is the kind your great-grandmother probably enjoyed: hens raised on pasture, where they can exercise and eat a diet of grass and bugs, supplemented with organic grains. Look for pastured eggs from local farmers you trust, and rely less on grocery store eggs advertised as “omega-3 enriched” or “free-range,” both claims that aren’t regulated.
The problem is that these days, buying the best egg has become complicated, even for the savviest label sleuth. Egg carton claims promise all sorts of nutrients and living conditions for the laying hens, but many claims aren’t even regulated. The best egg for your brain is the kind your great-grandmother probably enjoyed: hens raised on pasture, where they can exercise and eat a diet of grass and bugs, supplemented with organic grains. Look for pastured eggs from local farmers you trust, and rely less on grocery store eggs advertised as “omega-3 enriched” or “free-range,” both claims that aren’t regulated.
3. Cherry Tomatoes
All tomatoes are a great source of lycopene, a fat-soluble
phytonutrient that helps protect vital brain fat, and a nutrient that
actually stops the buildup of pro-inflammatory compounds linked to
depression. Because lycopene lives in tomato skins, the best way to get
it is through cherry tomatoes, whose smaller surface area means you’ll
eat more skin than if you eat a full-size tomato, explains Dr. Ramsey.
To maximize the amount of lycopene your body absorbs, drizzle some olive
oil over the tomatoes, and enjoy!
Just be sure to always choose organic. Trials at University of California–Davis have found that organic tomatoes have higher lycopene levels.
Just be sure to always choose organic. Trials at University of California–Davis have found that organic tomatoes have higher lycopene levels.
4. Honey
Eating sugar unleashes harmful free radicals linked to disease—even
cancer—inside of your body. Honey—although sweet like sugar—is packed
with beneficial compounds such as quercetin and kaempferol that actually
help clean up the free radicals and reduce inflammation. “Honey helps
reduce inflammation, which is very important to maintaining a healthy
brain,” Dr. Ramsey explains. “Some depression actually stems from
chronic, low-grade inflammation.”
5. Asparagus
This vegetable is one of the top plant-based sources of tryptophan,
which serves as a basis for the creation of serotonin, one of the
brain’s primary mood-regulating neurotransmitters. High levels of folate
also add to asparagus’s happiness-promoting profile; research has shown
that up to 50 percent of people with depression suffer from low folate
levels. Like tryptophan, it’s a necessary factor for creating
neurotransmitters. It’s also good to add to the menu if you plan on
drinking. The enzymes in asparagus are highly effective in breaking down
alcohol in your system, preventing a hangover—and that can make anyone
happy.
6. Greek Yogurt
This dairy pick is packed with more calcium than you’ll find in milk
or regular yogurt, and it can make you happy, too. Proper calcium levels
give the “Go” command, alerting your body to release feel-good
neurotransmitters. “Disturbances in calcium levels can produce anxiety,
depression, irritability, impaired memory, and slow thinking,” says Dr.
Ramsey in The Happiness Diet. Plus, the probiotics help aid in digestion and can even ward off colds.
If you find yourself nervous or agitated for an unexplained reason, try reaching for an organic Greek yogurt from cows raised on grass pastures. Pastured dairy is higher in healthy fats, and, like grass-fed lamb, often contain higher levels of CLA, the healthy fat that reduces the effects of stress on the brain.
If you find yourself nervous or agitated for an unexplained reason, try reaching for an organic Greek yogurt from cows raised on grass pastures. Pastured dairy is higher in healthy fats, and, like grass-fed lamb, often contain higher levels of CLA, the healthy fat that reduces the effects of stress on the brain.
7. Dark Chocolate
Ever wonder why chocolate makes you feel so good? Sure, it tastes
good, but it also provides an instant boost in concentration and mood
and even improves blood flow to the brain, helping you feel more vibrant
and energized. Skip the sugary milk chocolate blends and go directly
for the darkest organic (highest percentage of cocoa) chocolate you can.
A recent study published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology found that just a few ounces of dark chocolate a day results in better mood. (We love organic, fair trade Theo chocolate.)
8. Grass-Fed Lamb
Animals raised on grass pastures boast much higher levels of healthy
conjugated linoleic acid, or CLA. This happy fat beats back stress
hormones protecting brain cells and erases dangerous
inflammation-promoting belly fat, Dr. Ramsey explains. Grass-fed lamb is
also packed with mood-promoting heme iron, the type that your body most
readily absorbs. Iron is vital for a stable mood—its highest
concentrations in the brain are located in areas related to mood and
memory.
9. Blue Potatoes
Blue potatoes aren’t a common supermarket find, but they’re popping
up as a unique offering at farmer’s markets all over the country. The
color in blue potatoes is courtesy of anthocyanins, powerful
antioxidants that provide neuro-protective benefits such as bolstering
short-term memory and reducing mood-killing inflammation.
Be sure to eat their skins, too. The potatoes’ skins are loaded with iodine, a diet-derived nutrient essential for life, and one that helps regulate the thyroid, what Dr. Ramsey calls one of our “master mood regulators.”
And always choose organic potatoes. Nonorganic spuds usually fall victim to multiple toxic chemical sprays that are absorbed into the vegetables’ flesh.
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Be sure to eat their skins, too. The potatoes’ skins are loaded with iodine, a diet-derived nutrient essential for life, and one that helps regulate the thyroid, what Dr. Ramsey calls one of our “master mood regulators.”
And always choose organic potatoes. Nonorganic spuds usually fall victim to multiple toxic chemical sprays that are absorbed into the vegetables’ flesh.
10. Swiss Chard
This leafy green is packed with magnesium, a nutrient essential for
the biochemical reactions in the brain that boost your energy levels.
According to Dr. Ramsey, some of the first studies on magnesium involved
its effect on depression. That could come in handy today, since the
majority of Americans simply don’t get enough magnesium in their diet.
Green-thumb tip: Swiss chard is easy to grow in a home garden. If you plant it, harvest just a few outer leaves—not everything all at once—and the plant will continue producing all season long.
Green-thumb tip: Swiss chard is easy to grow in a home garden. If you plant it, harvest just a few outer leaves—not everything all at once—and the plant will continue producing all season long.
11. Mussels
Mussels are loaded with some of the highest naturally occurring
levels of brain-protecting vitamin B12 on the planet. That makes the
mollusk an important food source, considering that a significant portion
of the U.S. population is B12 deficient. So what’s the nutrient’s
mood-saving trick? Maintaining a healthy level preserves the myelin
sheath that insulates your brain cells, helping your brain stay sharp as
you grow older.
Mussels also contain trace nutrients that are important to balancing your mood, including zinc, iodine, and selenium, things vital to keeping your thyroid, your body’s master mood regulator, on track. An added benefit? Mussels are a healthy choice for you and the environment, which isn’t always the case when it comes to fish. Just be sure to look for farmed—not wild—mussels raised in the United States.
Mussels also contain trace nutrients that are important to balancing your mood, including zinc, iodine, and selenium, things vital to keeping your thyroid, your body’s master mood regulator, on track. An added benefit? Mussels are a healthy choice for you and the environment, which isn’t always the case when it comes to fish. Just be sure to look for farmed—not wild—mussels raised in the United States.
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