Ingredients
-
There are many minerals required for human health, including calcium phosphorus, iodine, iron, magnesium, zinc and selenium. While minerals have long been found in supplements and fortified foods, they are increasingly appearing in new products, from functional foods to cosmetics.
For nutraceutical use in functional foods and beverages, popular mineral additives include potassium, magnesium, calcium, selenium and zinc. Each of these minerals supports key functions in the body when at an appropriate level. Magnesium, for example, promotes bone health and supports energy and healthy blood sugar levels, while selenium is critical to the work of antioxidant enzymes.
In personal care and cosmetics, minerals enjoy widespread use. Copper detoxifies the skin and promotes collagen production, calcium maintains skin thickness and promotes cellular regeneration, magnesium soothes the skin and potassium helps maintain hydration. Skin care products generally combine minerals, often derived from mineral-rich natural sources like sea salts and clay.
-
Everybody’s talking about vitamin D’s role in maintaining bone health and preventing certain types of cancer. You
-
What’s with all the “nitrite free” labels on meat packages these days?
-
When flavoring foods, “the idea is not to make things salty, it’s to make them palatable,” says Morton Satin, director
-
The fifth taste distinguishable by humans, after sweet, salty, bitter, and sour, umami is a savory flavor imparted by
-
Have you ever wondered what gives green-tea ice cream or green-tea pound cake its vivid, matte green color? The secret
-
Limit sweeteners. Usually, a children’s vitamin needs to be sweet or else kids won’t take it. Pick one sweetened with
-
It’s not made up of a single organ or gland, and you can’t see it on an X-ray, but your lymphatic system is crucial to
-
Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA)What it is: The body makes small amounts of ALAa powerful antioxidant that neutralizes free