Guest guest Posted October 26, 2003 Report Share Posted October 26, 2003 Since gelatin is the denatured form of collagen, it seems odd that the gelatin in soup could be destroyed by excessive cooking. I suppose some of it could get hydrolyzed, but I wonder about the significance. I didn't know gelatin was inherently denatured until recently, and I asked my A & P professor about the question soup stock that doesn't gel, and if it could be from overcooking it, and he said the same thing, that since gelatin is already denatured, he would guess it would be a matter of concentration. That still leaves the question unanswered of why the amount of collagen-containing animal parts doesn't seem to correlate well. I think said his cooking time does, but I've never noticed a correlation with each (haven't systematically tested for one either). Mike recently mentioned that gelatin increases the absorption of minerals. I just read in my A & P book that it used to be thought that bone mineralization occurred when there was sufficient dietary minerals, but it is now known that mineralization cannot occur in the absence of collagen fibers (undenatured gelatin). Dietary gelatin probably stimulates collagen production by increasing the amount of the specific amino acids necessary for its synthesis. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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