|
|
PARAGUAY-AGRICULTURE-HEALTH-FOOD-STEVIA
TO GO WITH AFP STORY
Picture of boxes of stevia -- Latin name stevia rebaudiana bertoni -- ready for export, taken at the industrial plant NL, in Caacupe, 50 km east of Asuncion, on November 15, 2012. Experts from around the world gathered in Asuncion this week for a symposium on stevia, a herb declared as "genetic heritage" by Paraguayan President Federico Franco during the opening of the meeting in a bid to win international recognition as the stevia plant's country of origin. Stevia rebaudiana, sometimes known as sweatleaf or sugarleaf, or "ka'a he'e" in Guarani, has been used for centuries by the Guarani native people to sweeten their drinks, being 300 times sweeter than sugar with none of the calories. The US and most recently the European Union, finally gave their green light to the use of the age-old natural South American sweetener in foods and drinks, a thing widely done in Asia and South America before. Studies at the medical school at the University of Asuncion found stevia had a long list of beneficial properties, being an anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory and an anti-bacterial agent useful in the battle against diabetes, high blood pressure and tooth decay. AFP PHOTO/NORBERTO DUARTE
|
|
|
Detalii fotografie |
Loc: |
|
Caacupé, PARAGUAY |
|
Sursa: |
|
AFP / Mediafax Foto |
|
Fotograf: |
|
NORBERTO DUARTE |
|
Data: |
|
16 Noiembrie 2012 |
|
Dimensiuni: |
|
3831 x 2832 (1.06 MB) |
|
|
|
|
|
|