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Lycopene - found in high concentration in cooked red tomato products like canned tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato juice and garden cocktails, guava and watermelons. Zeaxanthin - best sources are kale, collard greens, spinach, turnip greens, Swiss chard, mustard and beet greens, corn, and broccoli
orange pigments . α-Carotene – to vitamin A carrots, pumpkins, maize, tangerine, orange.; β-Carotene – to vitamin A dark, leafy greens, red, orange and yellow fruits and vegetables.
Polyphenols (/ ˌ p ɒ l i ˈ f iː n oʊ l,-n ɒ l /) are a large family of naturally occurring phenols. [1] They are abundant in plants and structurally diverse. [1] [2] [3] Polyphenols include phenolic acids, flavonoids, tannic acid, and ellagitannin, some of which have been used historically as dyes and for tanning garments.
Beyond omega-3s and urolithins, walnuts also contain polyphenols, a type of antioxidant that may combat oxidative stress, which often contributes to chronic inflammation. Cranberries.
Sun-dried tomatoes boast the highest concentration of lycopene among tomato products, with 45.9 milligrams of lycopene per 100 grams. A 130-gram serving of fresh tomatoes contains 4 to 10 milligrams.
Eating beans, peas, and lentils can provide Americans with key nutrients and are excellent sources of protein ... (1/2 cup cooked) of beans provides about 7 grams of protein, the same as 1 ounce ...
Kaempferol (3,4′,5,7-tetrahydroxyflavone) is a natural flavonol, a type of flavonoid, found in a variety of plants and plant-derived foods including kale, beans, tea, spinach, and broccoli. [1] Kaempferol is a yellow crystalline solid with a melting point of 276–278 °C (529–532 °F).
Oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) was a method of measuring antioxidant capacities in biological samples in vitro. [1] [2] Because no physiological proof in vivo existed in support of the free-radical theory or that ORAC provided information relevant to biological antioxidant potential, it was withdrawn in 2012.