
Muscadine Grapes: A New Health Food and an
Alternative CropBy Doris
Stanley November 20, 1997 Scientists with the Agricultural Research
Service and Mississippi State University
have found significant amounts of resveratrol in the skin, pulp, and seeds
of muscadine grapes. Resveratrol is the compound in French wines said to lower
cholesterol and the risk of coronary heart disease. In the Southeast, muscadines are grown to make juice. But the researchers
are now using muscadine waste from juice processing to make products like
muffins, jams and granola cereal. One-half serving (two ounces) of unfiltered muscadine juice, one serving of
muscadine jam, one medium muscadine muffin, or one-tenth serving of muscadine
sauce give the same dietary amounts of resveratrol as four fluid ounces of red
wine. Thats according to the researchers, horticulturist Jim Magee at
ARS Small
Fruit Research Laboratory in Poplarville, Miss., and nutritionist Betty
Ector with MSU in Mississippi State, Miss. Muscadine puree--an excellent source of resveratrol, dietary fiber and some
essential minerals--is high in carbohydrates and low in fat and protein.
Powdered puree contains more dietary fiber than oat or rice bran. In MSU
studies, rats fed the powder had lower LDL (bad) cholesterol and higher HDL
(good) levels than animals in the control group. The muscadines newfound health benefits could boost the crop in the
Southeast. And Magee and ARS colleagues have developed growing methods that
reduce the time needed to produce a commercial crop from 5 years to 3 years.
A story about the research appears in the November issue of ARS Agricultural Research magazine.
The story can also be viewed on the World Wide Web at: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/nov97/musc1197.htm Scientific contact: James B. Magee, ARS, Small Fruit Research
Laboratory, Poplarville, MS 39470; phone (601) 795-8751, fax 795-4965,
[email protected];
Betty J. Ector, Mississippi State
University, Mississippi State, MS 93762, phone (601) 325-8090, fax 325-8188 U.S. Department of Agriculture | |