Talk:Make plants digestible

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Revision as of 12:12, 28 March 2025 by Elie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==Preliminary outline== more nutritious when raw: * fruits * bell peppers * onions more nutritious when cooked: * carrots * beans * lentils * potatoes * grains technical explanation: * cooking breaks down cell walls (unleashes nutrients) but also damages some nutrients (especially vitamin c, some b vitamins, and some misc antioxidants). * btw, chewing also breaks down cell walls without damaging nutrients. So if your food is easy to chew and high in heat-{{t2|labile|ppl...")
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Latest comment: 28 March by Elie in topic Preliminary outline

Preliminary outline

more nutritious when raw:

  • fruits
  • bell peppers
  • onions

more nutritious when cooked:

  • carrots
  • beans
  • lentils
  • potatoes
  • grains

technical explanation:

  • cooking breaks down cell walls (unleashes nutrients) but also damages some nutrients (especially vitamin c, some b vitamins, and some misc antioxidants).
  • btw, chewing also breaks down cell walls without damaging nutrients. So if your food is easy to chew and high in heat-labile discussion ppl arent familiar w this word, so define it here too nutrients, then eat it raw. Else cook it(...)( because for example with carrots, you gotta really chew the crap out of them to ensure maximum digestion/absorption ).

freeze-thaw-blend method:

  • breaks down cell walls without heat. "best of both worlds" basically
  • i haven't actually tried it very much yet
    • need to gather more empirical data on how many freeze-thaw cycles for each food
    • also, how to measure whether it's effective or not? is the texture of the food an accurate indicator, or do we need a science lab to measure digestibility?
  • this level of optimization probably isn't necessary for most foods
    • which foods is it worthwhile for?
    • carrots for example: it preserves antioxidants. But compare to "blended cooked carrots plus multivitamin"; good enough either way
    • green coffee bean drink idea i.e. "raw coffee"
  • in some cases it's not viable; for example, beans need to be cooked
    • in the case of soybeans, you can tell that blending it is better for high absorbability that doesn't require a lot of chewing. But for softer-type beans, does blending really make much difference (or is it diminishing returns - is digestibility already good enough if well cooked anyway)?

Elie (talk) 12:12, 28 March 2025 (EDT)Reply[reply]