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Alfalfa: why it’s oh so good for you

By Karen Appold

While Mom may have told you to finish your Brussels sprouts, telling you to eat your alfalfa sprouts would have been good advice, too.

The roots of an alfalfa plant descend 20 to 30 feet into the ground, bringing up nutrients that are unavailable on the surface. As a result, alfalfa is rich in minerals, vitamins, and other nutrients that help you to maintain a healthy body. Specifically, alfalfa contains vitamins A, B1, B6, C, D, E, G, and K. It is also rich in iron, zinc, magnesium, sodium, calcium, silicon calcium, potassium, phosphorus, chlorine, and carotene. You can consume it in various forms– leaves, seeds, sprouts, powder, juice, or tablets. Alfalfa sprouts, the shoots of the alfalfa plant, have a concentrated amount of vitamins and minerals.

Proteins in alfalfa contain essential amino acids such as tryptophane, theronine, arginine, and lysine. Alfalfa is also a rich source of dietary fiber and chlorophyll. In addition, it contains a high concentration of active antioxidants that prevent DNA destruction and slows the aging process.

Here are some ways in which alfalfa can specifically aid in certain health conditions.

Alfalfa sprouts have only eight calories and zero grams of fat in each cup, yet another reason to eat them up!

Karen Appold is a medical writer based in Lehigh Valley, PA.

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