Morello Sour Cherry Benefits

Morello Sour Cherry Benefits

Morello Sour Cherry Benefits

By Ingrid Pich

The Morello Sour Cherry appears when sweet cherries are almost finished and has many benefits.

The Morello cherry is well known and appreciated in Europe for baking, cooking, jam and eating.

They are quite tart, however, they are high in antioxidants and other health benefits.

They are difficult to grow in Australia as they require a cold climate.

After picking, sour cherries don’t stay fresh for long, which is why you won’t find them in stores.

The amazing thing is frozen sour cherries lose none of their nutritional value.

They’re full of compounds that stave off inflammation, have antiviral and antibacterial properties, help support heart health, and even fight cancer.

Two of these compounds are quercetin and ellagic acid, both shown to inhibit the growth of tumors and kill cancer cells without damaging healthy ones. Sour cherries are low in calories.

The anthocyanin presence in sour cherries – more than any other fruit – not only gives sour cherries their vibrant pigment, but also reduces inflammation, eases arthritis pain, reduces muscle and joint pain after exercise and may help lower risk of heart attack, stroke, and Type II Diabetes.

Ingesting sour cherries lowers uric acid levels in the blood, which helps prevent gout. In fact, cherry juice is an excellent natural remedy for gout pain. It’s also known as a very good source of melatonin, which may help prevent breast cancer as well as help to sleep better.

Sour cherry seed kernels were used in a study exploring beneficial bioactive properties. Researchers separated the oil from the kernel and found unsaturated fatty acids, oleic acids, tocotrienols, and tocopherols (separate components of vitamin E acting as antioxidants1), among other things.

The dried remainder of the kernel was also tested and found to contain polyphenols, flavonoids, vegetable acids, and anthocyanins, which may have useful therapeutic effects in the prevention of vascular diseases.

Another study showed that both sour and sweet cherries might play a supportive and/or protective role on neuronal cells due to the fruit’s rich phenolic contents, especially due to – again – the anthocyanins, which are slightly higher in the sour variety.