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Showing posts with label Marmite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marmite. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 April 2017

Can This Banned Condiment Boost Brain Function? (Marmite)

Not many in the US eat Marmite, the British version of Australia's savory spread known as Vegemite. Somewhat controversial in some countries (for an...

April 17, 2017 

marmite

Story at-a-glance

  • Marmite, the U.K. version of Vegemite, is a salty spread made since the 1800s from yeast extract and now shown by researchers to have numerous compounds to enhance your health
  • A single serving of Marmite provides 36 percent of the Reference Daily Intake (RDI) recommended for niacin, 50 percent of the RDI in folic acid and 40 percent of the RDI in vitamin B12, as well as other B vitamins
  • Marmite may increase gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels to optimize brain function and stave off cognitive disorders such as Alzheimer’s
  • Studies show Marmite to be better than peanut butter in terms of its ability as a brain booster, can successfully treat anemia and helps protect your body against resistant bacteria, including MRSA

By Dr. Mercola
Perhaps you first heard about Vegemite in the early 1980s from the Men at Work song, "Down Under."
The Australian sandwich spread, described by the Telegraph as a sticky, gloopy, salty spread made from yeast extract, may be the flavor that embodies the entire continent, as 23 million jars are purchased in Australia every year.1
Vegemite's first cousin, Marmite, is the British version of the controversial condiment. Both are considered an acquired taste, but it's the latter that's been scrutinized in scientific circles and found to contain some very impressive properties for the human body.
In fact, several studies show it contains vital nutrients, including 40 percent of the reference daily intake (RDI) for vitamin B12, 50 percent for folic acid and 36 percent for niacin, helps to protect against antibiotic-resistant superbugs such as MRSA and boosts gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels to restore optimal brain balance.2
Invented in the late 1800s, Marmite came first, followed by Vegemite, invented in the 1920s. In fact, Marmite was included in the ration packs English soldiers carried during World War I. The high level of different B vitamins is also attributed to its effectiveness as a mosquito repellent.
The Daily Meal describes the dark, rich sauce as "full of umami and, at first blush, one of the most disgusting things most Americans have ever tried."3
The British are serious about their Marmite. Owned by Unilever, the company's spoof Ministry of Marmite exists "to enrich the existence of all Marmite lovers, whether resident in the U.K. or overseas, through the comprehensive application of Marmite in every facet of their domestic, professional, cultural and social lives."4
Brits and Aussies are wild about their respective yeast extracts like many Americans are about jam on their morning toast, but Marmite isn't sweet like jelly and marmalade; it's umami, the newest flavor among the basic tastes of sweet, sour, salty and bitter. Umami is the Japanese word for "delicious," which in English means "savory."
Popular as a meat flavor for vegetarians, this yeast-based paste can be stored at room temperature and, although it might dry out, remains edible for years, according to the International Business Times (IBT).5 One must ask what's in it to give it such a remarkable calling card.

Sweden Not a Fan: Marmite's Controversial Components

The main ingredients in Marmite are yeast extract, vegetable extract and salt augmented with thiamin, folate, riboflavin, niacin, iron and vitamin B12. It's flavored with things like celery extract, although the exact ingredients and the amounts are a carefully guarded and undisclosed recipe.
The Marmite website reports that a jar contains 100 grams (just over 3.5 ounces) with 34 grams of protein, 30 carbs, 1.2 grams of sugar and 10.8 grams of salt.6 In spite of its strong flavor, some consider Marmite to be a bona fide superfood. According to Daily Mail:
"Both products are made via a complex method in which salt is added to a suspension of yeast and then heated, resulting in a rich paste loaded with free glutamic acids, also known as umami (it's the primary component of MSG).
The exact recipe is a secret, but various vegetable extracts and vitamins are also added."7
The glutamic acid in MSG, or monosodium glutamate, is an excitotoxin, which means it overexcites your cells to the point of damage or death. But the glutamic acid found in nutritional yeast binds to and is absorbed by other amino acids or proteins, while what is found in MSG is not. In essence, your body controls the glutamic levels.
While Marmite isn't exactly banned in Sweden, the government requires retailers to obtain special permission from the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration to place it on their shelves. IBT explains it this way:
"The paste is made by adding salt to the yeast by-product from breweries, heating the solution until the cell walls of the yeast are softened, then straining the solution to make it smooth.
The result is naturally rich in vitamins, especially the Vitamin B complex, but additional vitamins and minerals are added to Marmite — and that is what the Danish government dislikes."8
While in the U.S. Marmite barely shows up on the radar in terms of nutrition, it's been lab tested and declared better than peanut butter in terms of its ability as a brain booster. Recent studies have determined that the savory substance may increase your brain's neurotransmitters, the function involving messaging.

Marmite May Boost Your Brain's GABA Levels

Of course, it was a study based in the U.K., kicked off when researchers found that a single teaspoon of Marmite, taken daily by study participants, prompted a decrease in neural response to visual stimuli.
Scientists at the University of York said that's an indicator of increased gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels.9 According to Medical News Today:
"GABA is a neurotransmitter responsible for inhibiting the excitability of brain cells, helping to restore the optimal balance of neuronal activity required for healthy brain functioning. Put simply, GABA 'calms' the brain.
Previous studies have associated low GABA levels with an increased risk of numerous neurological and mental health disorders, including anxiety, depression, autism and epilepsy. As a result, researchers have been investigating ways to boost GABA levels in the brain."10
Study author Daniel Baker, Ph.D., used data from 26 adults, divided into two groups. One group was directed to eat a teaspoon of Marmite every day for a month, while the others ate the same amount of peanut butter.
Thirty days later, the study subjects underwent electroencephalography to measure brain activity in response to visual stimuli in the form of flickering lights.
The latter group had a 30 percent decrease in neural response to visual stimuli in comparison to the Marmite group but, even better, those responses were ongoing for another eight weeks.
The result was similar to that resulting from an animal study in which there was a 300 percent decrease in neural response to visual stimuli. The study concluded:
"This 'response gain' effect should provide a clear index of GABA availability in cortex, in that increasing GABA concentration should reduce the neural response evoked by visual stimuli to below normal levels."11
Baker said the main reason for the significantly reduced responsiveness to visual stimuli in the participants was most likely the high concentration of vitamin B12 in the Marmite.
Interestingly, while the scientists stressed that therapeutic recommendations couldn't yet be made, they touted the study as the "first example of how dietary interventions can alter cortical processes."12

B Vitamins: 'Super' Compounds in Marmite

According to the Journal of Clinical Investigation,13 niacin, or vitamin B3, one of the main ingredients in Marmite, helps protect your body against staphylococcus bacteria. The Telegraph reports that in tests, niacin:
" … [P]roduces neutrophils, a white blood cell that fights bacteria — [and] increased our immune system's ability to kill different strains of the bugs by up to 1,000 times.
This could mark a turning point in the battle against antibiotic-resistant superbugs, such as MRSA, the deadly strain that poses a threat in hospitals."14
Folate, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12 are essential for converting what could become a damaging molecule, called homocysteine, into the amino acid cysteine in a process called the methylation cycle.
Without this suppression mechanism, studies show heart disease and Alzheimer's to be an increased risk, as homocysteine can lead to brain and blood vessel deterioration. According to the George Mateljan Foundation:
"Homocysteine promotes atherosclerosis by directly damaging blood vessel walls and by interfering with the formation of collagen (the main protein in connective tissue).
Elevations in homocysteine are found in approximately 20 [to] 40 percent of patients with heart disease, and it is estimated that daily consumption of 400 mcg of folate alone would reduce the number of heart attacks suffered by Americans each year by 10 percent."15
Further, high levels of homocysteine not only are linked to blood vessel damage, but are often found in Alzheimer's patients, suggesting that many people all over the world may be suffering from a "Marmite" (or B vitamin) deficiency.
Other brain and mental capacities positively influenced by vitamin B3, or niacin, found liberally in Marmite, include attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), anxiety, depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. And B12 deficiency can trigger different types of psychoses and paranoia. Unfortunately, this deficiency is common.

SEE ALSO:  The Importance of B Vitamins for Brain Health and Combating Dementia

How an Early Scientist Discovered One of Marmite's Most Important Benefits

In the 1930s, English scientist Lucy Wills discovered that the folic acid content in Marmite could successfully treat anemia. In studying whether a vitamin deficiency might contribute to what was at the time called pernicious anemia of pregnancy, one review noted her research on the effects of Marmite, a "cheap yeast extract," on monkeys:
"One particular monkey did especially poorly, and for reasons which are not recorded — perhaps in desperation — she tried the cheap yeast extract, Marmite. It had a dramatic effect. Thus, after all the intensive examination of diets and exhaustive testing on rats, it was a chance intervention with a single animal that led to the breakthrough. Wills had taken the first step to the discovery of folic acid."16
According to nutritionist Melanie Brown, who specializes in pre-conception and pregnancy nutrition, Marmite can help pregnant women through morning sickness, as well as help elderly individuals who have lost their sense of taste.

High Salt Content Leads to Marmite Bans, but —

Denmark, which hasn't sold Marmite since May 2011, isn't the only country to look unfavorably on the savory condiment that a large portion of the known world swears it can't live without. The powers-that-be in Ceredigion, Wales, banned Marmite in elementary schools in 2008.
Oregon State University jumped on the bandwagon and began warning people not to take high "doses" of the stuff without medical supervision due to its high salt content. However, salt is not the ogre it's been made out to be. In fact, not enough salt in your diet isn't good for your heart. The more important question is whether or not your salt quotient is properly balanced with that of your potassium intake.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2017/04/17/marmite-boosts-brain-function.aspx

SEE ALSO:


Saturday, 8 April 2017

Marmite may be brain food, study says

Paris (AFP) - In a world bitterly divided into pro- and anti-Marmite factions, lovers of the tangy British spread have found support from an unexpected quarter: brain science.

Experiments found that volunteers who ate a daily spoonful of the dark-brown yeast extract seemed to have higher levels of a vital neuron chemical associated with a healthy brain.

The reason could lie in Marmite's high levels of vitamin B12, the investigators say.

Wednesday, 5 April 2017 | MYT 4:24 PM

In a study published on Wednesday, psychologists at the University of York in northern England recruited 28 volunteers and divided them into two groups.

One group ate a teaspoon of Marmite each day for a month; the other ate a daily teaspoon of peanut butter.

The volunteers wore non-invasive skullcaps fitted with electrodes to monitor brain activity while they looked at a screen with a visual stimulus -- a large stripey pattern that flickered at a regular rate.

The Marmite group showed a substantial reduction of around 30 percent in response to the stimulus compared with the peanut butter group.

The work, published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, sheds a powerful light on how diet can affect brain activity, the researchers say.

How Marmite worked was not clinically investigated.

But the presumption is that it boosts levels of an important neurotransmitter called gamma-amino-butyric acid (GABA).

GABA acts as a kind of brake on over-excited brain cells. It binds to neurons and reduces their activity, helping to provide balance in the brain.

Scientists have previously theorised that GABA helps to dampen fear or anxiety, which happens when neurons are over-stimulated.

The anti-anxiety drug benzodiazepine, for instance, works by beefing up GABA's effectiveness, and abnormal levels of GABA have been associated with epilepsy.

"This study suggests that eating Marmite is potentially good for you in that it seems to increase a chemical messenger associated with healthy brain function," lead authors Daniel Baker and Anika Smith told AFP.

"There could potentially be beneficial effects for people with some neurological disorders linked to GABA."

The pair said they were not clinicians or dieticians, so were unwilling to make any recommendations about what would be a healthy limit for eating Marmite.
"However, there is no evidence that normal consumption of Marmite has any negative effects," they said.

Compared with the same quantity of peanut butter, the team found that Marmite had around 116 times more vitamin B12, three times more vitamin B6, and nearly twice as much glutamate as peanut butter.

The new study appears in a specialist peer-reviewed publication, the Journal of Psychopharmacology.

Deemed a quintessential British food, Marmite has been the subject of a "love it or hate it" debate that has rumbled on for years, including a tongue-in-cheek campaign on social media to abolish the condiment.

One joke put around by detractors is thus: "I was in a good mood last week. I entered a competition and won a year's supply of Marmite -- one jar!"


http://www.thestar.com.my/news/world/2017/04/05/marmite-may-be-brain-food-study-says/

Saturday, 15 October 2016

Little sympathy for Unilever in town where Marmite is made

People in Burton upon Trent, where the world’s supply of Marmite is made, say Brexit is just an excuse to raise prices

Unilever’s Burton upon Trent factory where Marmite is produced.
 The Unilever factory produces more than 50m jars of Marmite a year.
Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian

P
eople in the town where Marmite is made have accused the product’s multinational owner company of “bully boy tactics” and using the weak pound as a smokescreen to raise prices on the English-produced spread.

At the local Tesco store, just under a mile from the Marmite factory at Burton upon Trent, there was even talk of a full boycott of Unilever’s products as shoppers described the move as scandalous. At the St Peter’s bridge store there were still around 30 jars of the spread on the shelves and there were no signs of panic-buying.
Pensioners Elspeth and Dennis Dickinson said they were planning to join the boycott, adding that the Staffordshire town was suffering from “Unilever fatigue” with the company repeatedly holding workers and local businesses to ransom.
Dennis, 70, said: “Everything about Marmite is local – the workers, the ingredients – so ultimately I do not understand their argument and it is just downright profiteering. We do like our Marmite as a family, especially our daughter, but we’re now going to boycott their products as we’ve had enough ofUnilever holding local businesses and their own workers to ransom.”
Meanwhile, Andrew Bradbury, 65, said many of his friends had been made redundant since the firm took over the plant a decade and a half ago and described the price hike as yet another disgraceful move.
Bradbury, who voted to remain in the EU, said many people in the town were already regretting voting to leave and claimed there was a feeling of foreboding as increasing numbers of businesses used similar tactics to hike up prices. Unilever is trying to increase the prices it charges Tesco by about 10%, citing the fall in sterling as the reason for the change. 
Unilever’s Burton upon Trent factory.
Pinterest
 Unilever’s Burton upon Trent factory. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian
He said: “I voted to remain for my grandchildren. I wanted to secure the future for them. I had a feeling businesses would do this but I still feel it is absolutely scandalous. Tesco are quite right to stand their ground. Saying that it is because of Brexit is just a convenient excuse.
“Since Unilever took over the factory there have always been issues but I don’t think it is going to end here and we will get penalised for Brexit for a very long time. They are holding local and national businesses to ransom and we need to take a stand against them.”
The Unilever factory, which sits in an industrial estate on the outskirts of the town, produces more than 6,000 tonnes of Marmite, around 50m jars, a year. Just 15% of the yeast extract is sent overseas and the rest is eaten in Britain, with 27 jars sold every minute.
The town’s beer heritage is an important factor: the basic ingredient of the spread is yeast sludge, a waste product left over from brewing beer, and there were once 30 breweries in the surrounding area. Now the raw materials come from across the UK .
Marmite fan Sean Savage said it was something people would have to accept as a consequence of Brexit. The 27-year-old carer said: “It is understandable that prices are going up and Tesco will just have to take on the price hike. I am a fan of Marmite and would be sad to see it go, so this is something that we will just have to accept.”
Meanwhile, retired postman Chris Hewitt. 63, stood firmly in Tesco’s camp, saying that Unilever’s argument was nonsensical as all the ingredients were sourced in Britain. He said: “What they are saying is just not true. All of the ingredients are locally sourced and this is just a way of making more profit for the shareholders. I can’t imagine it will filter down to the workers in the form of a pay rise.
“It is just extreme capitalism and they are behaving like bullies. This has got nothing to do with Brexit – it has got everything to do with making millions more in profit.”
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/oct/13/little-sympathy-unilever-in-town-burton-upon-trent-marmite-is-made

Monday, 10 December 2012

Marmite the 'cure all' spread

Love it, or health it

Marmite is labelled 'cure all' spread by researchers

Spread the word ... Marmite can help the body to fight off bugs like MRSA
Mary Turner 

 
The breakfast staple, famous for its Love It, Or Hate It slogan, is packed with niacin, a nutrient which in high doses increases the body’s ability to fight off staphylococcus bugs like MRSA by 1,000 times, researchers say.

Dr Adrian Gombart from Oregon State University said: “This could give us a new way to treat infections that can be deadly. It’s a way to tap into the power of the innate immune system to provide a more powerful and natural immune system.”

But this isn’t Marmite’s only claim to health fame. Here LYNSEY HAYWOOD looks at what else Marmite can do for you.


BOOSTS BRAINPOWER: Marmite is rich in vitamin B12 and folic acid, which can improve both the short and long-term memory.


brain
Brainy ... Marmite can improve long-term
and short-term memory. alamy

US researchers asked 700 people aged 60 to 74 to take a daily dose of either folic acid and vitamin B12 or a placebo. After two years, those who took the vitamins had better scores on memory tests. 
heart
Hearty ... Marmite contains B1 which helps healing
of tissue after a cardiac arrestAdd caption

HEALS THE HEART: Experts at the University of Bristol found Marmite can help those who have had a heart attack to live longer. It contains vitamin B1, or benfotiamine, which can speed up the healing of heart tissue after a cardiac arrest.

Marmite
Baby booster ... Marmite contains folic acid, essential for expecting mums
HELPS IN PREGNANCY: The Department of Health advises women to take folic acid supplements as soon as they start trying for a baby, and for the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. This can cut the risk of neural tube defects like spina bifida in their unborn baby.

But just four slices of toast with Marmite a day could provide your recommended daily allowance of folic acid and save you taking a supplement.


TACKLES ANAEMIA: Iron deficiency is increasingly common, especially in women. Marmite could combat this as it is not only a great source of iron itself but it also contains iodine which helps the body absorb iron.

Iodine also helps burn calories and a lack of it may make you gain weight and feel tired.
Marmite
Hair raising ... Marmite contains riboflavin
which helps stop you losing your locks
PREVENTS HAIR LOSS: The antioxidant riboflavin, another key ingredient, is essential for healthy hair, skin and nails. And a report by Medline Plus found that a deficiency could trigger hair loss.

MAKES SKIN GLOW: An ingredient called thiamin helps your body get the most out of the energy and nutrients in food, which helps keep your skin looking good.
 
Thiamin also helps the digestive system and protects muscle tissue and the nervous system.


BEATS DEPRESSION: Low levels of B vitamins have been linked to stress and depression. Just one serving of Marmite a day will give you 60 per cent of the B vitamins recommended by the Department of Health.


FIGHTS DIABETES: The benfotiamine in Marmite is also a potential new treatment for diabetes. Scientists have found the vitamin can stop glucose building up in blood. Tests on mice show it also reduces potential complications from the disease.

 
Read more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman/health/health/4507404/As-Marmite-helps-fight-off-bugs-like-MRSA-we-look-at-benefits-of-the-spread.html