Introduction and nutritional value of paprika

2019-09-24 qddsspen 4

  Paprika is a red or red-yellow, oily and even powder. It is a mixture of red pepper, yellow pepper, chili seeds and some pepper poles. It has the spicy flavor of pepper and smells pungent. Authentic should be made with stone shovel, or you can use dried chili directly, put it in the sun or simmer it in a pot and then pour it into powder.

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  Nutritional analysis

  1. Antipyretic and analgesic: Chili Xin Wen, can reduce body temperature by sweating, and relieve muscle pain, so it has a strong antipyretic and analgesic effect.

  2. Prevention of cancer: Capsaicin, an active ingredient of pepper, is an antioxidant that prevents the metabolism of the cells involved, thereby terminating the carcinogenesis of the cells and reducing the incidence of cancer cells.

  3. Increase appetite and help digestion: The strong spicy taste of pepper stimulates the secretion of saliva and gastric juice, increases appetite, promotes intestinal peristalsis, and helps digestion.

  4. Reduce fat and lose weight: Capsaicin contained in pepper can promote fat metabolism, prevent body fat accumulation, and help reduce fat and prevent disease.

  Therapeutic effect

  Capsicum is warm, spicy, and poisonous. It enters the spleen and stomach.

  Indications of dyspepsia, cold stomach pain, rheumatic pain, lumbar muscle pain and other symptoms

  Effect on the digestive system

  Capsicum or capsaicin, which can be used as a stomachic agent, can promote appetite and improve digestion. The animal test (Bassof stomach hyena) proves that pepper water stimulates the oral mucosa and reflexively enhances the movement of the stomach. Seasonings made from various types of peppers can increase saliva secretion and amylase activity after oral administration. Large doses of oral administration can produce gastritis, enteritis, diarrhea, vomiting and the like. It has been reported that pepper has inhibitory and antispasmodic effects on intestinal tubes of isolated animals.

  Antibacterial and insecticidal effects

  Capsaicin has a significant inhibitory effect on Bacillus cereus and Bacillus subtilis, but not on Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli. Its branches and leaves have no antibacterial effect and only have a slight inhibition on Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 10 to 20% of peppers have the effect of killing bed bugs.

  Redness

  External use as an abrasive has a swell effect on the skin, causing the skin of the skin to reflexively expand and promote the local blood circulation. Tinctures can be used for frostbite; however, it is also believed that peppers only strongly stimulate the sensory nerve endings, causing a warm feeling, which has little effect on blood vessels, and does not foam at high concentrations, so it cannot be regarded as a redness agent.

  The role of the circulatory system

  Spicy substances (ginger, pepper, especially pepper) can stimulate the taste receptors of the human tongue. Reflexively cause blood pressure to rise (especially diastolic blood pressure), no significant effect on the pulse. Intravenous injection of capsaicin or capsicum into anesthetized cats and dogs can cause transient blood pressure drop, slow heartbeat and difficulty breathing, which is caused by chemoreceptors or stretch receptors in the lung and coronary regions. It has a direct excitatory effect on the atrial guinea pig atrium, and also has a contractile effect on the hind limb blood vessels of rats.