Vegetable beer, purple carrots and Queen Garnet plum juice are just some of the fruits of the larder which will be on display and up for discussion at University of Southern Queensland's (USQ) first ever Functional Foods Festival.
Being held on campus in Toowoomba and Ipswich from August 8th to 11th, the festival will showcase the importance of what is and could be grown in the region to provide health benefits to communities.
It includes a Food for Health Symposium, with Canadian Professor Peter Jones, who has been brought to Australia by USQ as a Visiting Research Giant, as the keynote speaker.
'The University's work in developing foods with health benefits has attracted international attention, and is an area of research that makes us enormously proud," USQ Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Jan Thomas said.
'Professor Jones is one of the worlds' leading researchers in functional foods, and we are delighted he is able to be part of this festival with our own highly acclaimed team and other specialists to give the public an idea about this developing sector," Professor Thomas said.
Professor Jones is the founding Director of the University of Manitoba's Richardson Centre for Functional Foods and Nutraceuticals, which has worked closely with USQ's Functional Foods Research Group (FFRG).
Led by Professor Lindsay Brown and Dr Sunil Panchal, FFRG research has identified foods which can help reduce obesity and improve the structure and function of the heart and liver.
The FFRG's findings have helped to change the way the public views the connection between food and health, and have found functional foods may relieve inflammatory conditions such as arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and chronic kidney damage.
'Functional foods are also likely to help promote healthy ageing, and decrease the impact of inflammatory and metabolic diseases which can have such a big impact on people's quality of life as they age," Dr Panchal said.
'As such, this is really important research for the people in our region and beyond," he said.
As well as involving researchers from other universities, the symposium will include presentations from Nutrafruit, the Queensland company which has commercialised the Queen Garnet plum, and MDB Energy, which has developed high-value algae-based foods.
Professor Brown said the development of functional foods as an industry presented opportunities for food producers and processors as well as researchers and investors.
'Toowoomba and its surrounding regions have a long and proud history of growing fruit and vegetables, and of processing food."
'We look forward to telling people about where that is leading as food starts to interface with medicine," Professor Brown said.
Professor Jones will be speaking at all four Functional Foods Festival events. The festival kicks off at USQ Toowoomba with an afternoon lecture for schools on Monday August 8, followed by an evening public lecture on Tuesday and the symposium on Wednesday, August10.
The festival's final event is a public lecture at USQ Ipswich on Thursday August 11.
Question: What is the Functional Foods Festival?
Dr Sunil Panchal: The Functional Foods Festival is the celebration for increasing public awareness of the health benefits of functional foods and the unique role that USQ researchers have played in creating that awareness. In 2015, USQ researchers received a well-above world-class rating in the Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) ranking system for their research on functional foods. This festival will feature leading experts from USQ and around the world to showcase the importance of what can and should be grown in the region to provide health benefits to communities. The Functional Foods Festival will include a one-day Food for Health Symposium, as well as public lectures, to showcase how medicinal properties of certain foods can be identified and translated to provide benefits to the community. At the inaugural USQ Functional Foods Festival, we will be celebrating new opportunities in the global 'super foods' market.
Question: What are functional foods?
Dr Sunil Panchal: Functional foods are defined as foods that not only provide nutrition but also improve people's health by preventing or reducing chronic and inflammatory disorders, such as obesity.
Question: Can you share with us information about new developments in functional foods?
Dr Sunil Panchal: With increasing public awareness of the health benefits of functional foods there is a challenge to develop innovative ways of incorporating them in our existing diets. Commonly, a combination of foods are now being developed to deliver greater functional benefits than the individual foods.
Question: What do you hope to achieve from the Functional Foods Festival?
Dr Sunil Panchal: We hope to develop a network of primary producers, researchers and industries that can work together in order to develop better strategies to solve the food security in future but also provide the food with beneficial effects. This will bring the food researchers to work closely with each other to improve the evidence status for medicinal effects of foods grown locally.
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