FEELING GOOD Art by Joseph Thiel Gimme The Feed Bag, Nellie, Oat Bran's Back In Style CAROL SORGEN Special to the Jewish News I n our never-ending search for the Fountain of Youth — and clean-as-a-whistle arteries — another seemingly miraculous cure has hit the grocers' shelves. Oat bran. But is this new food craze all it's touted to be, or just this year's health hype? The answer, according to experts, is a little of both. Oat bran is a soluble fiber, meaning it dissolves in water. Soluble fiber acts like a sponge, soaking up water in the stomach and small in- testine. Researchers believe that soluble fiber can lower cholesterol levels by making cholesterol in the diet unabsorbable. Soluble fibers in general, and oat bran in particular, are being credited with helping to control blood pressure, and assisting in the management of diabetes and hypogly- cemia. While oat bran is the solu- ble fiber of choice these days, it is not the only soluble fiber available. Significant amounts can be found in other oat products, barley, chick peas, black-eyed peas, kidney beans, pinto beans, navy beans, and other legumes, sesame seeds, green peas, corn, sweet potatoes, carrots, okra, zucchini, cauliflower, prunes, pears, ap- ples, Concord grapes, and citrus fruits like oranges and grapefruit. The benefits of oat bran have been cited by medical reporter Robert E. Kowalski in his best-selling book, The 8-Week Cholesterol Cure; in The Low Cholesterol Oat Plan by Barbara Earnest and Sarah Schlesinger; and in numerous articles in both the medical and the popular press. In fact, the oat bran mania has reached such heights that if you're tempted to rush out and buy it — you can't. It's virtually sold out of every major food store, Everyone's talking about (and eating) oat bran, which researchers say can reduce cholesterol, and the stuff is becoming scarce at the supermarket. At Farmer Jack in West Bloomfield, there has been such a run on oat bran, say store officials, that even their supliers can't keep up with the demand. "We sell everything we get. Last Thursday, we had ten cases and by the end of the day we were sold out," said the manager at Farmer Jack in West Bloomfield. June Mahle, store manager at Betty's Grocery Store in Birmingham, also notes the oat bran craze. "Since the study on oat bran and the publication of the The 8-Week Cholesterol Cure the sales on oat bran have tripled, along with the prices," says Mahle. Mahle mentions that the store carries oat bran tablets in addition to the cereal. Some of the popular brands are Mother's, Quakers, and Arrowhead Mills. Super- markets usually carry the oat bran in the cereal aisle because their boxes label them as oat bran "cereal," and they can be eaten as a hot cereal or used for baking. The newest "oat bran hot cereal" on the market is Sovex, made by the Granola Company and now being rushed to supermarkets. Those who have jumped on the oat bran bandwagon have found that the best way to get the recommended daily allotment — 2 to 3 ounces a day — is to eat three oat bran muffins daily, preferably homemade ones. A recent article in the New York Times, however, in- dicated a wide range in the nutritional benefits of oat bran muffins that are sold in bakeries. Ideally, the muffins should be low in fat, low in sodium, and low in calories. Unfortunately, the Times found in a survey of 30 bakeries around the country, many of the oat bran muffins were more like dessert; and their fat content was so high that no matter how much oat bran they contained, they were no nutritional bargain. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 17-F