GENEVA, NY: Food scientists at Cornell University didn't
set out to prove Mom was right, but new research suggests people should
eat more apples and not spit out the skins.
"An apple a day could very well keep the doctor away,"
says Chang Y. Lee, a food chemist at the New York State Agricultural
Experiment Station in Geneva, NY. "The fact is, most Americans barely
eat one apple a week."
"Increasing dietary consumption of fresh apples-with
the skins on-provides additional phytochemicals that have a long-term
health benefit, and may prevent or reduce the risk of some chronic diseases,"
says Lee.
Apples contain naturally-occurring chemical compounds
known as phytochemicals, polyphenols, or flavonoids, some of which have
been proven to have antioxidant activity that inhibits, or scavenges,
the activity of free radicals in the body. Cell damage from free radicals
can be a factor in certain cancers, heart disease, strokes, and other
conditions.
The major antioxidant components in apples are polyphenols
contained mainly in the skin known as quercetin glycoside, phloretin
glycoside, chlorogenic acid, and epicatechin. The names are complex,
but their health value is clear: Quercetin has been reported to reduce
carcinogenic activity, inhibit enzymatic activities associated with
several types of tumor cells, enhance the antiproliferative activity
of anticancer agents, and inhibit the growth of transformed tumorigenic
cells.
In research funded by the New York Apple Research &
Development Board (NYARDB) over the last two years, Lee has shown the
average 150 gram apple contains several hundred milligrams of polyphenol.
He also ranked 24 different cultivars according to
antioxidant activity. In the three groups, apple varieties such as Northern
Spy, Liberty, Crispin, Delicious, and Fuji showed high antioxidant activity;
Idared, Jonagold, Gala, Freedom, and McIntosh apples showed medium activity;
while Empire, Ginger Gold, NY674, and Golden Delicious apples were relatively
low. Lee explains the difference in antioxidant activity among apple
varieties in terms of varying composition and concentration of specific
phenolic compounds.
In the paper Lee delivered at this summer's annual
meeting of the Institute of Food Technologists, and more recently to
the NYARDB, he noted that antioxidant activity of apples compares very
favorably with other common fruits and vegetables.
Grapes, pears, and peaches exhibit higher antioxidant
activity than apples; bananas are similar; oranges and grapefruits are
lower, he says. Among vegetables, garlic shows the highest antioxidant
activity followed by broccoli and tomatoes, all of which are higher
than apples. Other vegetables, such as spinach, carrots, onions and
green pepper show some antioxidant activity, but not as much as apples.
Per capita consumption of fresh fruit is the other factor in the apple-a-day
equation: banana consumption is 28 pounds per year, apples 19.3 pounds,
oranges 12.8 pounds, followed by grapes (6.9 pounds), grapefruit (5.8
pounds), strawberries (4.4 pounds), peaches (4.3 pounds), and pears
(3.1 pounds).
"If we consider total per capita consumption of fresh
and processed apples, and average antioxidant activity, the actual antioxidant
contribution of apples exceeds that of other major fruits in the American
diet," says Lee.
If you are bringing up baby, here's another little-known
fact: Baby-food applesauce is high in quercetin because skins are ground
into the sauce. In applesauce for adults, skins are peeled and discarded.
For children and adults, eating more fresh unpeeled
apples makes the most sense. Americans currently consume about 20 pounds
of fresh apples a year. If we were truly eating an apple a day, we'd
each consume 100 pounds a year. Increasing consumption would mean demand
for apples would far outstrip supply in states like New York, where
the annual crop amounts to 1.12 billion pounds, valued at $141 million.
A daily antioxidant requirement has yet to be established,
and we all know that scientists do not draw conclusions that aren't
iron-clad, but the inference is clear. "Apples are available year round,
are relatively inexpensive, and a good source of fiber and Vitamin C,"
says Lee. "Why shouldn't we eat at least one apple a day?"