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The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast

#115 Watercress as Medicine with Dr Kyle Stewart

The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast

Dr Rupy Aujla

Mindset, Healthy Eating, Nutrition, Health And Wellbeing, Health & Fitness, Dr Rupy, Nutritional Medicine, Wellness, Healthy Recipes, Improving Health, Doctor's Kitchen, Health Goals, Medicine, Mental Wellbeing, 868329, Lifestyle, Food And Lifestyle

4.72.7K Ratings

🗓️ 25 August 2021

⏱️ 68 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Watercress! It’s a beautiful ingredient. Peppery, vibrant, grown in the UK and fantastically healthy for you. It’s a vegetable from the Brassicaceae family. That includes other favourites of mine including broccoli, cabbage, sprouts and bok choy and more. A few studies demonstrate their ability to reduce DNA damage which could explain the association between brassica vegetable intake and reduced cancer risk and watercress is also known to be a good source of Lutein, beta carotene and vitamin C.


But is that all? My next guest Dr Kyle Stewart is a GP in South Devon as well as CEO and co-founder of Watercress Research Ltd. He holds an Honorary Clinical Associate Research Fellowship in Theoretical Medicine at The University of Exeter, alongside an NHS England Clinical Entrepreneur Fellowship which is how we were connected.


On today’s show you’ll hear how Kyle’s experience with a young child suffering nappy rash led him to find out more about the wonderful properties of watercress. And how research that has stemmed from this ever so common problem, could also extend to reducing the need for antibiotics, preventing and treating certain cancers and even creating a new form of plant-based protein. Starting off by finding out about the mechanism behind nappy rash and its relationship to ammonia, Dr Kyle discovered that watercress contains urease-inhibiting properties .. but the rabbit hole goes a lot deeper.


We have a wider conversation about the untapped potential of plants in general and how little we know about these incredible ingredients that we consume every day. Considering the success of cardiac drugs like digoxin and blood thinners like aspirin that have all been discovered from plants, why aren’t we aggressively investigating these more?


Using different preparations, experimental methods and a sprinkle of ingenuity could we create a completely new class of plant medications that have the ability to treat everything from eczema to IBD?


As always do us a favour, if you want to support the podcast do subscribe or hit follow on spotify it helps the rankings which means we get more listens and it means I can do more pods!

And do sign up for the newsletter at thedoctorskitchen.com where I send a weekly wellbeing trio of things to do. Something to eat, listen to, watch or read that will brighten up your week.


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Dr. Skitching.

0:02.0

Restorpees, health, lifestyle.

0:05.0

You're right, for soups and shakes and things like that,

0:07.0

something which is easily mixable, neutral flavour.

0:10.0

It's going to turn everything bright green, but that's necessarily the worst thing.

0:14.0

It could work, it could work really well.

0:17.0

And then once we're up and running, we're established,

0:19.0

we can start hopefully working with maybe sausage manufacturers or other people

0:23.0

and say, well look, what about replacing 30% of the meat and the sausage with this water press?

0:31.0

Welcome to the Doctor's Kitchen podcast.

0:36.0

The show about food, lifestyle, medicine and how to improve your health today.

0:43.0

I'm Dr. Rupi, your host. I'm a medical doctor, I study nutrition,

0:48.0

and I'm a therm believer in the power of food and lifestyle as medicine.

0:55.0

Join me and my expert guests,

0:57.0

where we discuss the multiple determinants of what allows you to lead your best life.

1:07.0

Watercress, it is a beautiful ingredient, peppery, vibrant, grown in the UK,

1:13.0

and fantastically healthy food.

1:15.0

It's a vegetable from the Brasco family, and that includes other favourites of mine,

1:18.0

including broccoli, cabbage sprouts, bok choy and more.

1:21.0

And a few studies demonstrate their ability to reduce DNA damage,

1:25.0

which could explain the association between brasco vegetable intake and reduce cancer risk.

1:31.0

And watercress is also known to be a good source of lutein,

...

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