2013 Is International Year of ¦ Quinoa Yes the rumors were true. The United Nations has named 2013 the International Year of Quinoa! OK so maybe you neglected to hug a sailor during the 2010 International Year of the Seafarer. Maybe you burned a little too much whale oil during the 2012 International Year of Sustainable Energy for All. You will be forgiven if only you can embrace this grainlike pseudo-cereal from the Andes. Why? Because quinoa (pronounced KEEN-wah) is one of the most nutritious foods on the planet cooked like rice gluten-free and loaded with vitamins and minerals. Even NASA is considering quinoa for long-duration planetary space flights ¦ perhaps as an apology for its Tang years. Quinoa an ancient crop grown mainly for its seeds is really a food for modern times. Its high-protein low-sugar gluten-free profile makes it an ideal diet food for nearly anyone but particularly for diabetics and those with celiac disease or similar gluten sensitivities. [The 7 Perfect Survival Foods] A 2010 review in the Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture described quinoa as an excellent example of 'functional food' that aims at lowering the risk of various diseases including heart disease cancer and the aforementioned diabetes. You can add antioxidant to the list of accolades as well. Although often categorized as a whole grain quinoa is genetically distinct from grains such as corn and wheat. It is a cousin to beets spinach and lambsquarters an edible weed most city dwellers walk by daily; and indeed quinoa's leaves also are edible and nutritious. But quinoa contains all the virtues of a whole grain helps control cholesterol arterial plaque and weight gain without the issues such as poor digestion some folks have with whole grains. Once considered a junk crop by the Spanish conquistadors quinoa now comes with an air of gourmet available only in health-food stores and high-end groceries. So the biggest problem in getting quinoa into your diet could be its high price usually more than three times the price of most grains. This high price for quinoa has been a double-edged sword for its producers. The recent U.S. demand for quinoa has sent the price soaring initially a boon for poor farmers in Bolivia and Peru where quinoa grows so easily at high altitudes and near-desertlike conditions. But the foreign demand now has made quinoa an export crop too expensive for that same local population where it has been a staple for perhaps millennia. Ironically the Bolivian government has reported a possible rise in malnutrition in quinoa-growing regions as a result. Traditional relationships between farmers and llama herders also are frayed. The United Nations not entirely blind to the complications of world food markets and the pressure on fragile ecosystems and traditional societies hopes that its international year designation will heighten public awareness of the nutritional economic environmental and cultural properties of quinoa for its indigenous growers as stated in the Resolution adopted by the U.S. General Assembly. Meanwhile North American farmers are attempting to grow quinoa along the Rocky Mountain Range from Colorado to Saskatchewan. If they succeed and if supply can meet demand then prices might fall ¦ perhaps in time for the 2014 U.N. International Year of Crystallography. Christopher Wanjek is the author of a new novel Hey Einstein! a comical nature-versus-nurture tale about raising clones of Albert Einstein in less-than-ideal settings. His column Bad Medicine appears regularly on LiveScience.