best fruit

Photo: Mauricio Alejo


Lately there's been so much focus on newcomers like acai and kale that less glamorous fruits and vegetables are sometimes treated like second-class citizens. But researchers are discovering new reasons to get excited about the old standbys.

The best part: You probably already stock many of them in your kitchen

celery

Photo: Thinkstock


Celery
A fixture on the oft-ignored crudité platter, celery is back on the must-eat list as a potential cancer fighter. It's a top source of a flavonoid called apigenin. Researchers recently discovered that when pancreatic cancer cells were treated with apigenin, 44 percent of the cells died. Apigenin activates a chemical reaction inside diseased cells, causing them to self-destruct, says study coauthor Elvira de Mejia, PhD. While eating celery can't cure pancreatic cancer (you'd never be able to eat enough), de Mejia says that over time a diet containing apigenin-rich foods may help prevent the disease.

grapes

Photo: Thinkstock


Grapes
The skins of these snackable bites are bursting with resveratrol, the same superstar antioxidant that helps make red wine good for your heart. Now a study in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research has discovered that resveratrol may also aid in boosting immunity—by helping increase levels of a molecule that kills bacteria and viruses. Study coauthor Adrian Gombart, PhD, says adding more grapes to your diet may even protect you from contracting infections in the first place.

mushrooms

Photo: Thinkstock


Mushrooms
For years fungi have been thought to be heart healthy and immunity boosting. Now science shows that they may even help prevent breast cancer by lowering estrogen levels, says Shiuan Chen, PhD, professor and chair of cancer biology at Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope in Duarte, California. Chen found that when postmenopausal women consumed 13 grams of mushroom powder (the equivalent of 1 and 1/3 cups of white button mushrooms) per day for three months, their estrogen production dropped by 27 percent.

bell peppers

Photo: Thinkstock


Bell Peppers
Researchers have long known that smokers have a lower risk of developing Parkinson's, a disease characterized by a loss of brain cells that make dopamine. No doctor would encourage lighting up, but there may be another way to get the benefit: peppers. They're a safe source of nicotine, which may protect dopamine-producing cells, says Susan Searles Nielsen, PhD, whose study, published in the Annals of Neurology, found that eating peppers (mostly bell peppers, but spicier varieties count, too) twice a week or more was associated with at least a 30 percent reduced risk of Parkinson's.


Next: Health benefits of spicy foods