Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 Pratick- >In particular, I care about the critical vitamins - A, D, B12 and the CLA. Vitamin A is fairly stable, D more so, B12 is stable... I've read conflicting information about CLA, so I don't know. Pantethenic acid, folate and vitamin C are destroyed by cooking, though. >Also, I don't mean deep-frying or well-done meat - simple marinating and >then cooking >with water, onions, and some spices. Acidic marination may destroy some nutrients too. Vitamin K is destroyed by strong acids, though how strong (and which type(s) of K) I don't know. Same for biotin and B12. Pantethenic acid is also destroyed by acid, and not necessarily strong acid, either. Others... I don't know. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 I understand that CLA was first discovered in Cheez Whiz. Must be pretty stable, huh? ;-) --- In , Idol <Idol@c...> wrote: > Pratick- > > >In particular, I care about the critical vitamins - A, D, B12 and the CLA. > > Vitamin A is fairly stable, D more so, B12 is stable... I've read > conflicting information about CLA, so I don't know. Pantethenic acid, > folate and vitamin C are destroyed by cooking, though. > > >Also, I don't mean deep-frying or well-done meat - simple marinating and > >then cooking > >with water, onions, and some spices. > > Acidic marination may destroy some nutrients too. Vitamin K is destroyed > by strong acids, though how strong (and which type(s) of K) I don't > know. Same for biotin and B12. Pantethenic acid is also destroyed by > acid, and not necessarily strong acid, either. Others... I don't know. > > > > > - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2005 Report Share Posted January 7, 2005 Pratick- >We marinate using yogurt and (very little) oil (usually grapeseed or >mustard oil). >If there are lots of bones too, we add white vinegar. >Would this be acidic enough to destroy the biotin, B12 and K? I seriously doubt it. I'm sure you're fine with that, though I don't know about those oils. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2005 Report Share Posted January 8, 2005 >We marinate using yogurt and (very little) oil (usually grapeseed or mustard oil). >If there are lots of bones too, we add white vinegar. >Would this be acidic enough to destroy the biotin, B12 and K? I don't know, but the acid in your stomach is more acidic than yogurt for sure! My understanding is that most of the K and B vitamins are produced by bacteria in the lower intestine, though I have heard of supplements working, so I'm not sure where acid fits in. Meat is supposed to sit in your very acidic stomach though until it dissolves into mush ( " chyme " ), so I wouldn't worry about a little marinade. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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