Siberian cedar pine nuts: healthy and beneficial
Asparagus sauté with cedar pine nuts: goodness and health!
When you’re attempting to maintain a healthy diet or are on one, you frequently have to make a lot of compromises since you think you have to eat only depressing and bland food. The same is true if you have dietary intolerances. Isn’t that accurate? In reality, there are many dishes that boast a reduced calorie intake, healthy ingredients, an exceptional taste, and high digestibility, and asparagus sauté with cedar pine nuts is certainly one of them!
This dish represents a perfect combination of very unique flavours and countless health benefits. Obviously, the credit goes to the main ingredients… So, pick them wisely and always go for quality! Be aware of the exceptional nutritional qualities of sautéed asparagus before you begin cooking. What are they?
Recipe Sauté di asparagi con pinoli di cedro
Preparation Sauté di asparagi con pinoli di cedro
- Wash the asparagus under plenty of fresh water, then dry them and cut them into strips about 3 mm thick, then set them aside.
- On a chopping board, chop the pine nuts; add them to the asparagus and add salt to taste.
- Heat a drizzle of oil in a saucepan. When it is very hot, brown the asparagus for a few minutes so that they soften, adding a little water if necessary.
- Put off the flame and put the asparagus on a serving plate. Add the parmesan flakes and the wedged cherry tomatoes as garnish.
- Garnish as desired and serve while still hot.
Ingredients Sauté di asparagi con pinoli di cedro
- 250 g. of asparagus
- 60 g. of cedar pine nuts
- 200 g. of cherry tomatoes
- 100 g. of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese flakes
- 3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
- salt to taste
Are you looking for a versatile and tasty dish? Here it is.
As you have understood, we are dealing with a truly special dish that combines numerous organoleptic characteristics with precious therapeutic and nutritional properties. In addition to having many health advantages, sautéed asparagus is a delicious and adaptable recipe that can be served as an appetiser or as a main course, making it ideal for vegetarians.
Its unique flavour and ingredient combination make it appropriate for both everyday meals and formal feasts, where you can wow your visitors.The flavour is unmatched. The only thing left to do is to get the dates, capers, asparagus, pine nuts, and parmesan ready for the sauté. It won’t be difficult, I assure you! For this recipe, we used Siberian cedar pine nuts!
Properties and benefits of the ingredients
Asparagus has a strong diuretic effect, is high in protein and low in carbs, and is a fantastic source of mineral salts, particularly potassium and magnesium. Thus, our main ingredients—the asparagus sauté, pine nuts, dates, capers, and parmesan—are appropriate for people with cardiovascular issues, high blood pressure, or water retention. Conversely, pine nuts are also abundant in proteins, zinc, potassium, calcium, iron, and numerous other vitamins; they boast antioxidant properties and give a great sense of satiety.
Dates also have many benefits: they are anti-inflammatory, help lower bad cholesterol, fight constipation, and fight colds. The capers in our asparagus sauté also have antioxidant and anti-tumour properties, help treat haemorrhoids, and, if consumed frequently, protect the skin from the harmful effects of the sun’s rays. Finally, there is parmesan cheese, which strengthens bones and is even suitable for lactose-intolerant people (thanks to the seasoning).
Siberian cedar pine nuts: they help us feel good.
In the 90s, we witnessed the boom of the salty snacks of the century, bagged French fries. They found the greatest gratification in the need to savour something that seemed light, crisp, and delicious.
Despite satisfying the palate, they still prove to be destructive for our body, not only because of the cooking method, frying, but also because of the high fat content they contain.
Thankfully, awareness of real and healthy nourishment is growing among both young and old people nowadays. In fact, it is so strong that it is influencing people’s taste for other snacks, with dried fruit coming in first.
Siberian cedar pine nuts: discovering new popular fruits
Almonds, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, flax seeds, sesame seeds—the list of dried fruit most consumed by Italians today would be endless.
This list will actually continue to expand over time due to the outsourcing of goods and services, to the point where we occasionally taste dried fruit in meals that we have never had before.
Putting aside any nationalism, which goes so far as to forbid the consumption of foods that we would never find in Italy, Siberian cedar pine nuts have become more popular in recent years.
The term makes us easily deduce that these are pine nuts that are absolutely not alternatives to our regular pine nuts, since they are something “else”: they are obtained from the fruit of a tree that has its primordial origins in the ice age and that can reach 50 meters in height and two meters in width.
Essential nutrients for our bodies
However, what should be the rationale behind our preference for eating these tiny nuts? The explanation for this is the extremely high intake of vitamins from the B and E groups that these tiny but potent nuts can provide for our bodies.
It is therefore not surprising that they have acquired such fame; just think of the large quantity of potassium of which they are natural carriers, equal to 600 mg per 100 g of product.
Today we are all interested in the presence of these nutrients, which to define as precious is really an understatement. Vitamin E is essential for the health of our skin and to counteract the oxidation process of the body; B is essential for the correct functioning of the nervous system; potassium must never be lacking in our body, as it is able to regulate many physiological functions, including muscular reactions.
How to use Siberian cedar pine nuts? It can be used alone as a healthy alternative to junk food or as an additional ingredient in some recipes where traditional pine nuts are usually used.
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