
(Photo: Ayana Underwood/Canva)
When you search for anti-inflammatory foods, most results suggest adding tomatoes, green leafy vegetables, strawberries, whole grains, and fatty fish like salmon to your diet. While these are fantastic recommendations, they鈥檙e a bit uninspiring. When I learned that pumpkin has anti-inflammatory properties, I was pleasantly surprised and grateful that I already had the plump gourd in my cupboard.
I buy canned pumpkin every week to prepare frozen treats for my pup, Ollie, because research shows that the in pumpkin (about three grams per cup) can promote better and combat diarrhea in dogs.
After speaking with two sports dietitians, I learned that pumpkin is also great for humans. Here鈥檚 how adding more pumpkin to your diet can aid your overall health and performance.
is the body鈥檚 immune response to an illness or injury. It can occur outside the body鈥攍ike if you scrape a knee and get a scab鈥攐r inside the body due to a variety of health or lifestyle reasons, such as having an underlying disease like obesity, sleeping poorly, eating a diet high in processed foods, drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes, or over-exercising and straining your muscles.
To heal, the body releases a range of substances (mainly hormones and inflammatory molecules) that dilate blood vessels to help blood and immune cells reach the injured tissue. This process facilitates healing, but it can also irritate nerves along the way, causing pain, swelling, and redness near the affected tissue.
Short-term inflammation, which is sudden and temporary,聽is typically no big deal, but long-term (which can persist for months, even years) can be a huge problem. If left untreated, the body can鈥檛 heal. The inflammation will compound, which can lead to serious health issues (such as stroke and cancer), an impaired immune system, and, in the case of overtraining, muscle fatigue, impaired performance, and a higher risk of injuries, says聽, a sports dietitian and associate professor in the department of Nutritional Sciences at Texas Tech University.
To recover quickly and lower your risk for certain diseases, you want to eat foods that can naturally reduce inflammation, says , a dietitian and clinical associate professor of nutrition and dietetics in the School of Health Sciences at Missouri State University.
Pumpkin is loaded with antioxidants like beta-carotene,聽substances that prevent or delay cell damage, says Allen. They do this by reducing oxidative stress, a condition where molecules called free radicals grow out of control and damage your organs and tissue, says Childress. This, in turn, lowers levels of in your body, which is crucial not only for your overall health but for muscle recovery as well.
After a strenuous workout, your muscles experience mild inflammation, and eating foods with antioxidants can reduce it, Allen explains. The result? Faster recovery and fewer injuries.
The next perk: pumpkin is full of fiber. shows that fiber enhances the diversity of your gut microbiome, the community of microbes that live in your digestive tract, helping decrease inflammation in your body, says Childress.
Pumpkin is a great source of potassium (one cup of canned pumpkin contains of potassium, 15 and 20 percent of the recommended daily value for men and women, respectively), which is an important electrolyte your body expels through your sweat, says Childress. Replenishing electrolytes after an intense workout can 鈥渞educe exercise-related inflammation and muscle soreness,鈥 she says. It can also prevent muscle cramps, adds Allen.
Additionally, one cup of pumpkin contains about ; that鈥檚 roughly 13 percent and 15 percent of the daily recommended value for men and wommen, respectively. 鈥淲hen we think about soft tissue repair, like ligaments and tendons and muscles, vitamin C is a key nutrient,鈥 says Childress. As long as you鈥檙e also eating enough protein, she adds, consuming vitamin C can help your muscles, bones, and cartilage recover and grow.
Roughly half to one cup per day. However, for many, this much pumpkin isn鈥檛 realistic, Allen says. So you can aim to hit these daily recommended values by consuming a mix of vitamin A sources, including sweet potatoes, carrots, squash, and peppers. The goal is to eat about 5.5 cups of orange vegetables each week.
Pumpkin isn鈥檛 just for pies鈥攊t can be added to so many snacks and meals.鈥淧umpkin pur茅e, in my professional opinion, is as good as if you got a pumpkin, roasted it, and pur茅ed it yourself,鈥 says Childress.
So, add a cup of pumpkin pur茅e to a smoothie, make protein bites or balls using a mix of rolled oats, pumpkin pur茅e, pumpkin pie spice, flour, and chocolate chips or nuts. You can spread pumpkin pur茅e over a piece of toast and drizzle it with honey, peanut butter, almond butter, or Greek yogurt.
Add a half cup to your morning oatmeal, add it into your pancake mix, or whip up a pumpkin hummus for an afternoon snack. Or, hey, do what I do for my dog and freeze a dollop of pumpkin alongside Greek yogurt and peanut butter (it鈥檚 actually extremely tasty).
You can also cook real pumpkin as you would spaghetti squash鈥攃arve out the seeds and strings, pour some olive oil on it, and roast it in the oven for about 45 minutes at 350鈩. As for pumpkin seeds, you can toss them in salads, parfaits, or trail mix, Allen recommends. Just make sure to chew them thoroughly; otherwise, they鈥檒l pass right through you, and you鈥檒l lose out on the benefits, says Childress.
Allen says the best time to eat pumpkin is within an hour after working out, especially when paired with a protein or carbohydrate, because your body is primed to absorb nutrients more effectively, says Allen.
But if you miss that window, don鈥檛 worry. Pumpkin is just as nutritious any time of day, says Allen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very nutrient-rich food and you don鈥檛 need very much of it to get a lot of bang for your buck,鈥 she says.
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