logo
We Asked 3 Cardiologists the One Food They Always Keep in Their Pantry—Here's What They Said

We Asked 3 Cardiologists the One Food They Always Keep in Their Pantry—Here's What They Said

Yahoo3 days ago
Reviewed by Dietitian Jessica Ball, M.S., RD
Getty Images. EatingWell design.
Your heart pumps over 2,000 gallons of blood per day, delivering oxygen and nutrients to every cell and organ in your body, picking up waste along the way and sending it to be filtered. With how important this single organ is, it's no wonder that keeping your heart healthy is one of the best things you can do for your overall health and well-being. And while heart disease is the leading cause of death in the U.S., there's a lot you can do to reduce your risk, starting right in your kitchen. Research shows that heart-healthy eating patterns like the Mediterranean diet and DASH diet can help improve key markers for heart health. These diets emphasize whole foods that are rich in fiber, healthy fats, antioxidants and plant-based proteins.
But you don't have to overhaul your entire diet or break the bank to start supporting your heart. Keeping just a few simple heart-healthy ingredients in your pantry can make it easier to add important nutrients to your everyday meals and snacks. We asked cardiologists for their must-have pantry staples, and chances are you already have a few of them on your shelf. Here's what they recommend keeping stocked.
1. Olive Oil
If you're wondering what oil to grab for roasting vegetables, whisking up marinades and dressings or finishing your pasta, olive oil can be a heart-healthy choice. 'I recommend keeping some delicious olive oil close at hand and using it as your primary cooking oil, but also to drizzle it on each of your meals throughout the day,' says Elizabeth Epstein, MD.
Advertisement
Olive oil has an extensive history of research supporting its role in improving cardiovascular health. A 2022 meta-analysis of 13 studies with over 865,000 participants found a strong relationship between olive oil consumption and a decreased risk of cardiovascular disease. For every 5-gram (about 1 teaspoon) increase in olive oil per day, they found a 4 percent decrease in cardiovascular disease risk and all-cause mortality.
'The best nutrition evidence we have supports the Mediterranean diet, which has been tested in several randomized controlled trials and shown to reduce heart attacks, strokes and cardiovascular death by 30 percent,' says Dr. Epstein. The liberal use of olive oil may be a key part of the puzzle with its high levels of anti-inflammatory polyphenols, antioxidants and oleic acid. While any olive oil will offer some benefit, extra virgin olive oil is highest in antioxidant and bioactive plant compounds that may offer additional benefits to your heart.
2. Legume-Based Pasta
You don't have to skip pasta, even on a heart-healthy diet. 'One food I always keep stocked in my pantry is legume-based pasta, such as pasta made from edamame and mung bean, lentils, chickpeas or black beans,' says Dr. Danielle Belardo, M.D. Pasta made from legumes is typically higher in protein and fiber compared to wheat pasta, and can be much more filling. When it comes to heart health, eating more beans and bean-based foods is a safe bet. Multiple studies link legume consumption to improvements in lipid profiles and a reduced risk of heart disease, including one study suggesting that adults who eat legumes four times per week have a 22 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease than those who only eat them once each week. This is partly due to the high amount of soluble fiber found in legumes, which effectively lowers LDL-cholesterol and supports steady blood sugar.
If eating whole beans several times a week feels like a big leap from where you're at, legume-based pasta can be a simple and approachable switch. 'It's nutrient-dense, easy to prepare and aligned with the principles of evidence-based heart-healthy eating,' says Dr. Belardo, who emphasizes legume-based pasta's positive impact on glycemic control, satiety and overall metabolic health.
3. Oats
Your morning bowl of oatmeal may be doing more for your heart than you realize. Oats are rich in soluble fiber, beta-glucans and anti-inflammatory compounds, like phytosterols, all of which help lower cholesterol and support healthy weight management.
Advertisement
'Oats, like all whole, plant-based foods, contain plant sterols, a group of substances made in plants that block cholesterol absorption in the digestive tract,' says Dr Elizabeth Klodas. Between soluble fiber binding cholesterol in the gut, plant sterols reducing absorption and beta-glucans positively influencing the gut microbiome and cholesterol metabolism, oats are a triple threat against heart disease.
Just be sure to choose whole, minimally processed oats. Research shows they retain more of their fiber, beta-glucans and heart-healthy phytochemicals compared to ultra-processed or highly-sweetened oats and oat-based foods. Luckily, between overnight oats, hot oatmeal, granola, oatmeal pancakes and smoothies, there are endless ways to enjoy them!
Our Expert Take
Heart-healthy eating doesn't have to include a total pantry makeover. The foods cardiologists always have in their own pantries include simple staples like olive oil, oats and legume-based pasta. Regularly including these foods in a balanced, overall healthy diet may help lower cholesterol, support a healthy weight and protect your heart well into the future.
Read the original article on EATINGWELL
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Centene's First Quarterly Loss In 13 Years Sends Shares Crashing
Centene's First Quarterly Loss In 13 Years Sends Shares Crashing

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Centene's First Quarterly Loss In 13 Years Sends Shares Crashing

Healthcare insurance giant Centene Corporation (NYSE:CNC) saw its stock tumble significantly on Friday after reporting a surprising second-quarter 2025 adjusted loss of 16 cents per share. This stark reversal from an adjusted income of $2.42 per share in the prior year quarter sharply contrasted with analyst expectations of a $1.26 per share profit, marking the company's first quarterly loss since the second quarter of 2012, according to data from Benzinga Pro. Despite the earnings shortfall, Centene demonstrated strong top-line growth, with sales surging 22% year-over-year to $48.74 billion, comfortably exceeding the consensus estimate of $44.48 billion. However, this revenue performance was overshadowed by substantial increases in medical costs.'We are disappointed by our second-quarter results, but we have a clear understanding of the trends that have impacted our performance, and are working with urgency and focus to restore our earnings trajectory,' stated Sarah London, Chief Executive Officer of Centene, acknowledging the challenging quarter. The company's premium and service revenues climbed 18% to $42.5 billion from $36.0 billion a year ago. This growth was primarily fueled by expanding premium and membership in the Prescription Drug Plan (PDP) business, overall market growth in the Marketplace business, and rate increases within the Medicaid segment. These gains, however, were partially offset by a decline in Medicaid membership due due to ongoing redeterminations and reduced net risk adjustment revenue in the Marketplace. View more earnings on CNC A critical factor in the earnings miss was the deterioration of Centene's Health Benefits Ratio (HBR), which climbed to 93.0% in the second quarter of 2025, up from 87.6% in the corresponding period last year. This increase primarily stemmed from a reduction in the company's estimated net 2025 Marketplace risk adjustment revenue transfer, escalating medical costs within the Marketplace, higher Medicaid medical costs driven by behavioral health services, home health, and high-cost drugs, and an increase in the 2025 Medicare Advantage premium deficiency reserve as earnings progressed through the year. Total membership across Centene's diverse portfolio declined to 28 million from 28.48 million a year ago, predominantly due to a reduction in Medicaid membership from 13.14 million to 12.82 million. Conversely, the company experienced strong membership growth in other key areas, with Marketplace enrollment increasing 33% to 5.86 million and Medicare PDP expanding 19% to 7.85 million compared to the second quarter of 2024. Earlier in July, Centene had already signaled potential headwinds by withdrawing its 2025 GAAP and adjusted diluted EPS guidance, following an initial review of 2025 industry data from Wakely, an independent actuarial firm. The company announced that it would provide updated guidance during its earnings conference call. Centene's stock performance this quarter mirrors a broader trend within the healthcare insurance sector, as evidenced by the recent decline in shares of competitors like Elevance Health Inc. (NYSE:ELV) and Cigna following their own earnings reports. Elevance Health notably saw its stock plummet after missing analyst expectations for its second-quarter 2025 adjusted earnings and significantly lowering its full-year guidance, despite strong revenue growth. In premarket trading on Friday, Centene's stock plummeted 14.5% to $22.89, falling below its previous 52-week low of $26.66. The continued downward pressure underscores significant investor concern over the unexpected quarterly loss and the challenging operational environment impacting the healthcare insurance industry. Read Next:Image via Shutterstock Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? CENTENE (CNC): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Centene's First Quarterly Loss In 13 Years Sends Shares Crashing originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

Lilly completes acquisition of Verve Therapeutics to advance one-time treatments for people with high cardiovascular risk
Lilly completes acquisition of Verve Therapeutics to advance one-time treatments for people with high cardiovascular risk

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lilly completes acquisition of Verve Therapeutics to advance one-time treatments for people with high cardiovascular risk

INDIANAPOLIS, July 25, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) today announced the successful completion of its acquisition of Verve Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: VERV). Verve is a Boston-based clinical-stage company developing genetic medicines for cardiovascular disease. "This acquisition unlocks the opportunity to potentially transform the treatment paradigm for millions of patients worldwide by delivering lifelong cardiovascular risk reduction with a one-and-done treatment," said Ruth Gimeno, Lilly group vice president, Diabetes and Metabolic Research and Development. "We are excited to welcome Verve colleagues to Lilly and work together to develop innovative genetic medicines for cardiometabolic disease." About LillyLilly is a medicine company turning science into healing to make life better for people around the world. We've been pioneering life-changing discoveries for nearly 150 years, and today our medicines help tens of millions of people across the globe. Harnessing the power of biotechnology, chemistry and genetic medicine, our scientists are urgently advancing new discoveries to solve some of the world's most significant health challenges: redefining diabetes care; treating obesity and curtailing its most devastating long-term effects; advancing the fight against Alzheimer's disease; providing solutions to some of the most debilitating immune system disorders; and transforming the most difficult-to-treat cancers into manageable diseases. With each step toward a healthier world, we're motivated by one thing: making life better for millions more people. That includes delivering innovative clinical trials that reflect the diversity of our world and working to ensure our medicines are accessible and affordable. To learn more, visit and or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn. F-LLY Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking StatementsThis press release contains forward-looking statements regarding Lilly's acquisition of Verve, regarding prospective benefits of the acquisition and Verve's gene editing programs for cardiovascular disease, regarding Verve's product candidates and ongoing clinical and preclinical development, and regarding Lilly's development of programs for cardiovascular disease and advancement of cardiometabolic health medicines. All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements that could be deemed forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements reflect current beliefs and expectations; however, these statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties, including with respect to drug research, development and commercialization, Lilly's evaluation of the accounting treatment of the acquisition and its potential impact on its financial results and financial guidance, regulatory changes and developments, the impact of global macroeconomic conditions, including trade and other global disputes and interruptions, including related to tariffs, trade protection measures, and similar restrictions, risks that the acquisition disrupts current plans and operations or adversely affect employee retention, and any legal proceedings that have been or may be instituted related to the acquisition. Actual results could differ materially due to various factors, risks and uncertainties. Among other things, there can be no guarantee that Lilly will realize the expected benefits of the acquisition, that product candidates will be approved on anticipated timelines or at all, that any products, if approved, will be commercially successful, that all or any of the contingent consideration will become payable on the terms described herein or at all, that Lilly's financial results will be consistent with its expected 2025 guidance or that Lilly can reliably predict the impact of the acquisition on its financial results or financial guidance. For further discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties, see Lilly's most recent Form 10-K and Form 10-Q filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Except as required by law, Lilly undertakes no duty to update forward-looking statements to reflect events after the date of this press release. Refer to: Ashley Hennessey; gentry_ashley_jo@ 317-416-4363 (Media)Michael Czapar; czapar_michael_c@ 317-617-0983 (Investors) View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Eli Lilly and Company Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

PHOTO ESSAY: Many Californians lack safe tap water and don't trust cleanup efforts
PHOTO ESSAY: Many Californians lack safe tap water and don't trust cleanup efforts

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

PHOTO ESSAY: Many Californians lack safe tap water and don't trust cleanup efforts

THERMAL, Calif. (AP) — Agustin and Ricarda Toledo loaded eight empty 5-gallon jugs onto their truck and drove to a water store some 14 miles from their Southern California home, just as they've done almost weekly for years. The couple, originally from Mexico, planned to make dozens of chicken tamales for their five children and 13 grandchildren that weekend, and the limited flow of clean, safe water from their home filter wouldn't suffice. 'We can't consume the water; we can't use it' to drink or cook, said Ricarda, a retired farmworker whose family lives in and co-owns a mobile home park, speaking in Spanish. 'We'd like to have potable water." In the agriculturally rich Eastern Coachella Valley, water is a source of worry. What flows from many people's taps contains health-damaging arsenic, and in areas where the issue has been resolved, distrust about the tap water lingers. Many rely on water donations or drive miles to fill water jugs and buy packs of bottles. Residents here are mostly low-income Latino and Indigenous farmworkers whose only affordable housing options are mobile home parks served by small, outdated systems more likely to violate drinking water rules. Luz Gallegos, executive director of Training Occupational Development Educating Communities, or TODEC, an immigrant and farmworker justice group, said people live in places with contaminated water because they have no other choice. 'Our community right now is not thinking of prevention. Our community is thinking of survival,' Gallegos said. More than a decade after California legislatively recognized that all residents have the right to clean water, more than 878,000 people were connected to failing water systems, many of which can increase their risk of cancer or other serious health issues, according to 2024 state data, the last year available. The Environmental Protection Agency has been working with a local nonprofit to restore safe drinking water to some Eastern Coachella residents. Last year, the agency announced that more than 900 people could safely drink and cook with tap water again. Distrust of tap water is widespread Many still fear the tap — an issue not unique to the area. Flint, Michigan's water crisis that began in 2014 eroded public trust of government and tap water. Even after high levels of lead were reduced to well below a state threshold, many residents still won't drink or cook with it. It's a distrust most common among non-white populations, research shows. A recent study on drinking water behaviors and perceptions in Evanston, Illinois, a suburban city north of Chicago, found, in part, that people who drank mostly bottled water were more likely to be Black, Indigenous or other people of color. Compared with white respondents, they were more than three times more likely to distrust tap water. The finding that minority groups in Evanston were more likely to distrust tap water was 'remarkably consistent' with research elsewhere, said Sera Young, a study co-author and co-director at the Center for Water Research at Northwestern University. 'It's a global phenomenon,' Young said. Respondents' main concern was contamination. A lack of trust in government and negative experiences with water were among other reasons. 'People who thought that they had been harmed by their water in the past were more likely to think they would be harmed by the water in future,' Young said. That's true for Martha. For 18 years, she and her husband lived in the Eastern Coachella Valley's Oasis Mobile Home Park, where the EPA found high levels of naturally occurring arsenic in the tap water in 2019. Martha, who is in the country illegally and spoke under the condition that only her middle name be used, said the water sometimes smelled like rotten eggs. An itchy rash would sometimes break out over her body when she showered, and her hair would fall off in clumps. She thinks the water was to blame. Martha and her family now live in a new place and have been told the tap water is safe to consume. "We don't trust it,' Martha said. They buy water at stores or pick up bottled water at one of TODEC's offices, where plastic-wrapped packs cram a closet. The group provides free water to many of the area's residents and organizes know-your-rights workshops in farm fields, among other things. Perceptions can cause cascading effects Anisha Patel, a pediatrics professor at Stanford University who has studied drinking water access and tap water perceptions for years, said immigrants from countries with unsafe tap water can also bring those perceptions here and low-income families are more likely to distrust the tap because they may live in older homes. These perceptions can have significant negative impacts. People are more likely to consume sugary drinks, eat out and spend limited money on bottled water — upward of 10% of their household income, said Patel. Microplastics found in containers like bottled water, researchers are learning, may be harmful. Then there's the environmental impacts — single-use bottled beverages create enormous waste. Convincing people to drink from the tap is not easy, but experts have some recommendations based on their research findings. That includes government funding to improve plumbing in people's homes and investing in community-trusted groups to implement water testing programs and educational campaigns, said Silvia R. González, co-director of research at the UCLA Latino Politics and Policy Institute who lead a study in 2023 exploring drinking water distrust in Latino communities. 'It's been something that we've been trying to understand for the past 10, 15 years now, and I don't think we're closer to solving the issue, but we definitely see similarities across different communities,' especially among immigrant, Spanish-speaking and other non-English-speaking groups, González said. Back in the California desert, water jugs and stacked packs of bottled water are a common sight inside and outside homes. The kitchen in Virgilio Galarza Rodriguez's mobile home is cramped by bottled water — boxes and shrink-wrapped packs piled four high, a drinking water dispenser topped by a 5-gallon (19-liter) jug with a spare nearby and more loose bottles scattered around. The Galarzas, raising three boys, drank and cooked with tap water 16 years before a 2021 inspection by the EPA revealed arsenic at levels more than six times the federal limit. Despite now having filters and regular water tests, the family still worries. 'They tell us it's safe to drink, but we don't really trust it,' Galarza said, speaking in Spanish. ___ The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP's environmental coverage, visit Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store