Guest guest Posted July 14, 2005 Report Share Posted July 14, 2005 What I've found about acrylamide: It is formed from a reaction between sugar (glucose, fructose, or sucrose) and the amino acid asparagine. It will form in sugary or starchy foods when fried, toasted, or oven-baked at high temperatures. It does not form during boiling temperatures. Thus, all french fries and potato chips (and baked potatoes) contain acrylamide, regardless of organic status or soil quality. Mashed potatoes should be safe, and sweet potatoes should be cooked by boiling rather than baking (which should, I would think, produce the same result, considering how soft sweet potatoes become when baked). Acrylamide can be reduced in home-cooked foods if the potatoes are NOT stored at cold temperatures, if the potatoes ARE soaked in cold water for a few minutes before cooking, and if toast is toasted to the minimum acceptable and browned or burnt parts are removed. Dufty claimed in _Sugar Blues_ that traditionally open-air-cured tobacco had its sugar eliminated and for this reason was not carcinogenic like flume-cured tobacco. He said that the Japanese consider the tobacco-lung cancer connection ridiculous, and that the correlation did not exist in Japan. Additional to his point, the Japanese smoke much more than Americans but have considerably less lung cancer. This all makes sense with acrylamide: acrylamide would be formed in tobacco smoke if the tobacco contained sugar, but not if the tobacco was cured in a way that eliminated the sugar. That doesn't mean tobacco smoke doesn't contain *other* carcinogens, but it is one more reason to belive that traditionally processed cigarettes are at least LESS carcinogenic than modern American-style cigarettes. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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