6 biggest lies about food busted
Here are the details of why you should go ahead and eat the
yolks, plus highlights of other food myths that just won’t die.
Myth 1: Eggs are bad for your heart.
The Truth: Eggs do contain a substantial amount of cholesterol in
their yolks—about 211 mg per large egg. And yes, cholesterol is the
fatty stuff in our blood that contributes to clogged arteries and
heart attacks. But labeling eggs as "bad for your heart” is
connecting the wrong dots, experts say. "Epidemiologic studies show
that most healthy people can eat an egg a day without problems,”
says Penny Kris-Etherton, Ph.D., R.D., distinguished professor of
nutrition at Penn State University. For most of us the cholesterol
we eat doesn’t have a huge impact on raising our blood cholesterol;
the body simply compensates by manufacturing less cholesterol
itself. Saturated and trans fats have much greater impact on
raising blood cholesterol. And a large egg contains only 2 grams of
saturated fat and no trans fats. The American Heart Association
recommends limiting cholesterol intake to less than 300 mg
daily—less than 200 mg if you have a history of heart problems or
diabetes or are over 55 (women) or 45 (men). "That works out to
less than an egg a day for this population—more like two eggs over
the course of the week,” notes Kris-Etherton.
Related: Two Dozen Easy, Healthy Egg
Recipes
Myth 2: High-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) is worse for you
than sugar.
The Truth: The idea that high-fructose corn syrup is any more
harmful to your health than sugar is "one of those urban myths that
sounds right but is basically wrong,” according to the Center for
Science in the Public Interest, a health advocacy group. The
composition of high-fructose corn syrup is almost identical to
table sugar or sucrose (55 percent fructose, 45 percent glucose and
50:50, respectively). Calorie-wise, HFCS is a dead ringer for
sucrose. Studies show that HFCS and sucrose have very similar
effects on blood levels of insulin, glucose, triglycerides and
satiety hormones. In short, it seems to be no worse—but also no
better—than sucrose, or table sugar. This controversy, say
researchers, is distracting us from the more important issue: we’re
eating too much of all sorts of sugars, from HFCS and sucrose to
honey and molasses. The American Heart Association recently
recommended that women consume no more than 100 calories a day in
added sugars [6 teaspoons]; men, 150 calories [9 teaspoons].
Related: Delicious Desserts with Surprisingly Low Added
Sugars
Myth 3: A raw-food diet provides enzymes that are
essential to healthy digestion.
The Truth: "Raw foods are unprocessed so nothing’s taken away; you
don’t get the nutrient losses that come with cooking,” says Brenda
Davis, R.D., co-author of Becoming Raw: The Essential Guide to
Raw Vegan Diets (Book Publishing, 2010). But the claim by some
raw-food advocates that eating raw boosts digestion by preserving
"vital” plant enzymes, Davis explains, just doesn’t hold water.
"Those enzymes are made for the survival of plants; for human
health, they are not essential.” What about the claim by some
raw-foodistas that our bodies have a limited lifetime supply of
enzymes—and that by eating more foods with their enzymes intact,
we’ll be able to spare our bodies from using up their supply? "The
reality is that you don’t really have a finite number of enzymes;
you’ll continue to make enzymes as long as you live,” says Davis.
Enzymes are so vital to life, she adds, "the human body is actually
quite efficient at producing them.”
Myth 4: Your body can’t use the protein from beans
unless you eat them with rice.
The Truth: Proteins—which our bodies need to make everything from
new muscle to hormones—are made up of different combinations of 20
amino acids. Thing is, our bodies can make only 11 of these amino
acids; we must get the other nine from food. Animal-based
protein-rich foods like eggs and meat provide all nine of these
"essential” amino acids, but nearly all plant foods are low in at
least one. Experts used to say that to get what your body needs to
make proteins, you should pair plant-based foods with complementary
sets of amino acids—like rice and beans. Now they know that you
don’t have to eat those foods at the same meal. "If you get a
variety of foods throughout the day, they all go into the ‘basket’
of amino acids that are available for the body to use,” says
Winston J. Craig, Ph.D., R.D., nutrition department chair at
Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Michigan.
Related: Cheap, Quick Dinners Using Canned
Beans
Myth 5: Microwaving zaps nutrients.
The Truth: This is misguided thinking, says Carol Byrd-Bredbenner,
Ph.D., R.D., professor of nutrition at Rutgers University in New
Brunswick, New Jersey. Whether you’re using a microwave, a charcoal
grill or a solar-heated stove, "it’s the heat and the amount of
time you’re cooking that affect nutrient losses, not the cooking
method,” she says. "The longer and hotter you cook a food, the more
you’ll lose certain heat- and water-sensitive nutrients, especially
vitamin C and thiamin [a B vitamin].” Because microwave cooking
often cooks foods more quickly, it can actually help to minimize
nutrient losses.
Related: How to Cook 20 Vegetables
Myth 6: Radiation from microwaves creates dangerous
compounds in your food.
The Truth: "Radiation” might connote images of nuclear plants, but
it simply refers to energy that travels in waves and spreads out as
it goes. Microwaves, radio waves and the energy waves that we
perceive as visual light all are forms of radiation. So, too, are
X-rays and gamma rays—which do pose health concerns. But the
microwaves used to cook foods are many, many times weaker than
X-rays and gamma rays, says Robert Brackett, Ph.D., director of the
National Center for Food Safety and Technology at the Illinois
Institute of Technology. And the types of changes that occur in
microwaved food as it cooks are "from heat generated inside the
food, not the microwaves themselves,” says Brackett. "Microwave
cooking is really no different from any other cooking method that
applies heat to food.” That said, microwaving in some plastics may
leach compounds into your food, so take care to use only
microwave-safe containers.
What food myth are you sick of hearing people
defend?
|