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Eden Foods Organic Whole Grain Muesli Unflavored -- 17.6 oz


Eden Foods Organic Whole Grain Muesli Unflavored
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Eden Foods Organic Whole Grain Muesli Unflavored -- 17.6 oz

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Eden Foods Organic Whole Grain Muesli Unflavored Description

  • Three Whole Grains + Three Dried Fruits + Two Seeds
  • 100% Organic Hot - Cold Cereal

100% Organic Muesli

U.S.A. family farm organic • oats • rye and • spelt wheat roasted and rolled into easy-to-use whole grain flakes. Sweet, tangy organic fruit • raisins • wild blueberries • cranberries. Organic roasted • pumpkin and raw • sunflower seeds lend richness, crunch and nutrition. Enjoy this breakfast cereal cold, hot, right out of the bag and use it in baked goods.

 

Antioxidant Value • Low Sodium • Save the Bees • Support Family Farms


Directions

Cold Cereal

Soak ½ cup Eden Muesli in ½ cup Edensoy®, Eden Apple Juice, or water for about 10 minutes. For softer cereal, soak overnight. Top with fresh fruit if desired. Makes 1 serving.

 

Hot Cereal

Place ½ cup Eden Muesli in 1 cup boiling water. Cover, reduce heat to low, and simmer 3 to 5 minutes until creamy. Top with fresh fruit if desired. Makes 1 serving.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Nutrition Facts
Serving Size: 1/2 Cup (55 g)
Servings per Container: About 9
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Calories210
   Calories from Fat45
Total Fat5 g8%
   Saturated Fat1 g5
   Trans Fat0 g
Cholesterol0 mg0%
Sodium15 mg1%
Total Carbohydrate37 g12%
   Dietary Fiber4 g16
   Sugars8 g
Protein6 g12%
Iron8%
Thiamin (B1)10%
Phosphorus10%
Magnesium20%
Zinc8%
Manganese80%
Other Ingredients: *Oat flakes, *rye flakes, *spelt flakes, *raisins, *cranberries (*cranberries, *apple juice concentrate, *sunflower oil), *wild blueberries (*wild blueberries, *apple juice concentrate, *sunflower oil), *roasted and salted pumpkin seeds, *raw sunflower seeds.
*indicates certified organic.
The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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What is Resistant Starch - and How Can it Benefit Your Health?

If you love carbohydrates, science is giving you a great reason to eat foods such as legumes, whole-wheat pasta and bananas. It all boils down to the “resistant starch” found in these foods and others.

Resistant starch got its name because it is “resistant” to digestion. As a result, this type of starch bypasses the small intestine – where most food is digested – and moves into the large intestine, where it ferments. Healthy bacteria living in the colon use the starch as a source of food.

Pot of Wheat Spaghetti Boiling on Stove Top to Represent Example of Resistant Starch | Vitacost.com/blog

The benefits of resistant starch

Resistant starch has been associated with promoting good health in people, including:

  • Improved gut health
  • Lower blood sugar ­following a meal
  • Reduction of appetite
  • Anti-­inflammatory activity in the body

One recent study of mice even found a link between consumption of resistant starch and a reduced incidence of colon cancer.

Foods rich in resistant starch tend to produce a sense of fullness in the person who eats them. Thus, they also may be a good food source for people trying to lose weight.

In addition, such foods have a lower glycemic index. This means they trigger a smaller rise in blood glucose than other starchy foods.

For that reason, resistant starch may be particularly good for people with diabetes.

“Consuming resistant starch in place of refined starches lowers post-meal blood glucose and the associated insulin response,” says Erin Peisach, a San Diego-based registered dietitian nutritionist.

Getting more resistant starch into your diet

You will not see the term "resistant starch" on a food label, although you might see it under the guise of terms such as "starch," "cornstarch," "modified corn starch" or "maltodextrin."

However, many of the foods you likely eat every day are good sources of resistant starch. You also might try a recipe featuring resistant starch ingredients.

When looking for ways to increase resistant starch in your diet, it helps to think a bit outside the box. For example, bananas are a great source of resistant starch – but only if you don’t get stuck on yellow when you shop for them.

"Consume greener, less ripe bananas when you’re picking them out at the store," Peisach says. That is because as bananas ripen, the starch in them turns to sugar.  

When cooking starches such as whole-wheat pasta, boiled potatoes and rice, allow these foods to cool before eating them. Cooling changes the chemical composition of the carbohydrates in these foods, giving them an optimal resistant-starch kick.  

Peisach’s other tips for increasing resistant starch in your diet include:

  • Eating more cooked yams, and legumes such as lentils and chickpeas. In fact, legumes are one of the best sources of resistant starch. On average, raw, dried legumes contain up to 30 percent resistant starch by weight, according to the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
  • Consuming at least one serving each day of whole grains such as muesli, oats, buckwheat, barley and brown rice.
  • Making smoothies and adding in prepackaged resistant starch. Peisach suggests Bob’s Red Mill Unmodified Potato Starch.

Adjusting to resistant starch

Before you fill your plate with foods rich in resistant starch, recognize that a slow transition to this type of diet makes more sense.

“Any sudden increase in fiber can cause digestive symptoms like bloating, gas and cramping” Peisach says.

Gradually increasing your intake of foods rich in resistant starch while also drinking plenty of fluids can help you avoid such issues.  

Also, don’t assume that you can get your fill of resistant starch from supplements or fortified foods, Peisach says.  

“It is important to receive most resistant starch from whole food sources and not supplements,” she says. Such whole foods offer additional nutritional benefits that go beyond what you will find in supplements.

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