There’s an easier way
to fall asleep fast and sleep straight through the night than popping a
sleeping pill or downing a glass of vino: Just eat something.
Well, okay, not just anything—chow down on the wrong stuff and you’ll be up
all night. For example, a study found that eating
protein-rich foods fires up the cells in your brain (called orexin cells) that
make you alert and energetic. And if you drink before bed, 4 hours into sleep
the alcohol wears off, leaving you in a more activated state.
But the right bedtime
snacks can put you in prime position for a stress-free evening—one with hours
and hours of sleep ahead.
So where do you start?
Here are six surprising sleep-inducing foods to add to your grocery list today.
Bananas
A little sugar
counters the effects of your orexin cells, says Dr. Winter. Try a banana before
bed—it will give you just enough sugar to calm your orexin cells, plus magnesium
and potassium to help to relax your muscles.
Passionfruit Tea
When people drank a
cup of either passionfruit or parsley tea, the passionfruit drinkers slept more
soundly. Researchers believe chemicals called harman alkaloids—high levels of
which are unique to the passionfruit flower—act on your nervous system to make
you sleepy. (From white to green and everything in between)
DID
YOU KNOW? Red wine contains some of the world’s best medicine—and you don’t
have to go broke to reap the benefits! .
Hummus
While L-tryptophan—the
amino acid that supposedly makes you crash after Thanksgiving dinner—does make
you sleepy, there are better sources than turkey. Consider elk instead, at 746
milligrams (mg) a portion, it far surpasses turkey (333 mg). Game meats not
your thing? Sesame seeds (120 mg) and hummus (usually about 600 mg) are packed
with L-tryptophan too.
FIX
IT WITH FOOD: foods that, even in moderation, can strengthen your heart,
fortify your bones, and boost your metabolism.
Which
snacks are actually good for you?
Chinese Food
GABA
(gamma-Aminobutyric acid) is an inhibitory neurotransmitter in your body—in
other words, it’s your brain’s brakes to calm the party down. It plays a role
in regulating the excitability of neurons throughout your nervous system. The
only problem: “It’s not found in food, so you can’t really eat GABA-rich
products,” Instead, you can eat foods high in glutamic
acid—a precursor to GABA that turns into the neurotransmitter in your body.
Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is the salt of glutamic acid, and it’s usually added
to Chinese food.
While MSG sometimes
gets a bad reputation because it makes food “addictively” good tasting, the FDA
has declared it a safe food additive. MSG can be made simply enough by putting
salt on a tomato. Other natural options: raw seaweed/spirulina (6,648 mg
glutamic acid), Chinese cabbage (6,232 mg), or low-fat cottage cheese (7,455
mg). Still, if you experience the symptoms often associated with MSG, you should avoid it.
Recent research found that drinking an ounce of cherry juice
twice a day—once in the morning and once at night—for a week helped people
sleep an extra 25 minutes. Why? It’s laced with L-tryptophan, which can convert
into serotonin, and eventually melatonin—the compound that influences your
sleep cycle. Increase the melatonin circulating in your body, and you’ll
increase the chances of a good night’s sleep, too. Try an ounce of juice or a
cup of cherries before bed. Since there are no foods high in melatonin, you
want to look for foods that can produce it. A few to keep in mind: milk,
yogurt, oats, eggs, and peanuts.
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