Preserving
Nutrients When Cooking Foods
Some people think raw foods are more
nutritious than cooked ones. However, some foods are less nutritious raw
because they contain substances that destroy or disarm other nutrients.
For example, raw dried beans contain
enzyme inhibitors that interfere with the work of enzymes that enable your body
to digest protein. Heating disarms the enzyme inhibitor. Some, foods (such as
meat, poultry, and eggs) are positively dangerous when consumed raw (or
undercooked).
There’s no denying that some nutrients
are lost when foods are cooked. Simple strategies such as steaming food rather
than boiling, or broiling rather than frying, can significantly reduce the loss
of nutrients when you’re cooking food.
Virtually all minerals are unaffected by heat. Cooked or raw, food has
the same amount of calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, iron, zinc,iodine, selenium, copper, manganese, chromium, and sodium. The single exception to this rule is potassium, which — although not affected by heat or air —
escapes from foods into the cooking liquid.
With the
exception of vitamin K and the B vitamin niacin, which are very stable in food, many vitamins are
sensitive and are easily destroyed when exposed to heat, air, water, or fats
(cooking oils).
To avoid specific types of vitamin
loss, keep the following tips in mind:
· Vitamins A, E, and D: To
reduce the loss of fat-soluble vitamins A and E, cook with very little oil. For example,
bake or broil vitamin A–rich liver oil-free instead of frying. Ditto for
vitamin D–rich fish.
· B vitamins: Strategies
that conserve protein in meat and poultry during cooking also work to conserve
the B vitamins that leak out into cooking liquid or drippings: Use the cooking
liquid in soup or sauce.
Do not shorten cooking times or use
lower temperatures to lessen the loss of heat-sensitive vitamin B12 from meat,
fish, or poultry. These foods and their drippings must be thoroughly cooked to
ensure that they’re safe to eat.
Do not rinse grains (rice) before
cooking unless the package advises you to do so (some rice does need to be
rinsed). Washing rice once may take away as much as 25 percent of the thiamin (vitamin B1). Toast or bake cakes and breads only until the crust is
light brown to preserve heat-sensitive Bs.
· Vitamin C: To reduce
the loss of water-soluble, oxygen-sensitive vitamin C, cook fruits and vegetables in the
least possible amount of water. For example, when you cook 1 cup of cabbage in
4 cups of water, the leaves lose as much as 90 percent of their vitamin C.
Reverse the ratio — one cup water to 4 cups cabbage — and you hold on to more
than 50 percent of the vitamin C.
Serve cooked vegetables quickly: After
24 hours in the fridge, vegetables lose one-fourth of their vitamin C; after
two days, nearly half.
Root vegetables
(carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes) baked or boiled whole, in their skins,
retain about 65 percent of their vitamin C.
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