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Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine

April 13, 2008

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

 

A report from the

nutrition department of Cornell

University should convince you that microwaving food does not

destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her

 

colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin

C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods.

Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost

because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek,

March 14, 2008).

Microwave

ovens use electromagnetic waves that vibrate

water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most nutrients

in

food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in

the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported in

 

the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all

of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture,

November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked

the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full

power.

The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a

high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time

vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of

water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a

microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For

nutrient-

rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no

more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times.

Contrary

to myths spread by a popular natural health

newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has

no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the food

 

comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the

microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the

nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other

 

method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a

microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused

by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most

people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for

cooking.

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I am trying to remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in the natural healing field.

 

Jackie

 

-

Lynn Ward

arubyrogers ; ; Sharing-Diet-Info

Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-ZineApril 13, 2008Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods A report from the nutrition department of Cornell University should convince you that microwaving food does not destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods. Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek, March 14, 2008). Microwave ovens use electromagnetic waves that vibrate water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most nutrients in food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported in the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture, November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full power. The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For nutrient-rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times. Contrary to myths spread by a popular natural health newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the food comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for cooking.

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I believe it changes the structure of the cells or something similar...Jackie Davis <Hill8628 wrote: I am trying to remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in the natural healing field. Jackie - Lynn Ward arubyrogers ; ; Sharing-Diet-Info Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-ZineApril 13,

2008Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods A report from the nutrition department of Cornell University should convince you that microwaving food does not destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods. Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek, March 14, 2008). Microwave ovens use electromagnetic waves that vibrate water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most nutrients in food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported in

the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture, November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full power. The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For nutrient-rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times. Contrary to myths spread by a popular natural health newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has no effect whatever on food other

than to heat it up. Once the food comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for cooking.

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At 06:33 AM 4/11/2008, you wrote:

I remember reading some stuff that said molecules were affected, and it

made sense to me. What you're saying also makes sense to me.....But, I

just received the info below, and thought it interesting in light of the

fact we had just been discussing it. Dr. Mirkin is usually pretty

good...I though the article was interesting, as was the study done at

Cornell Univ. While I haven't made up my mind yet, I'm not discounting

it.....I think I need to learn a bit more about it before I definitively

make up my mind one way or the other. It seems hard to believe that some

change doesn't occur when things are micro-waved. It surprised me to read

that there was less loss of vitamin C when micro-waving food versus other

cooking methods. I would have thought there would have been more

loss

IMO, part of the problem I see with the natural community, is many

beliefs aren't based on hard science, but by observation and word of

mouth. I wish there were more scientists in the natural community.

..Preferably, ones who would perform objective tests, not ones to support

a particular idea or belief. I don't see it as mutually exclusive -

science and natural methods...But, I think it's difficult, if one

believes certain things to not try and find stuff that supports them.

But, IMO, the only way some of what the natural community believes is

going to be widely accepted, or accepted by certain people, is hard

scientific data. Dunno, may not be a popular view, it's just what I

happen to believe.......

Lynn

 

 

I am trying

to remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys

nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food

which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in

the natural healing field.

 

Jackie

 

 

-

Lynn Ward

arubyrogers

;

 

;

 

Sharing-Diet-Info

Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM

Microwaving Does Not Harm

Foods

Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine

April 13, 2008

 

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

 

A report from

the nutrition department of Cornell

University should convince you that microwaving food does not

destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her

 

colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin

 

C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods.

Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost

because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek,

 

March 14, 2008).

Microwave ovens use

electromagnetic waves that vibrate

water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most

nutrients in

food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in

 

the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported

in

the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all

of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture,

 

November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked

 

the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full

power.

The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a

 

high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time

 

vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of

water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a

microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For

nutrient-

rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no

more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times.

Contrary to myths spread

by a popular natural health

newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has

 

no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the

food

comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the

microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the

nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other

 

method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a

microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused

by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most

 

people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for

cooking.

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Lynn

If you can come up with any other article, any article at all,

about microwave dangers, hazards, other than the article one is

referring to in quite a few posts here (without the post under discussion

having been produced here)

feel welcome to post it. Thinking in the vein you argued for that

we should keep in mind, that many people here might not ever have seen

this article before, this article might give a few more guidelines to

those and give rise to search further.

Assumptions that those who prefer alternative health modalities

over the scientific approach which has proven by now maims and kills

people, specifically look for articles that support their ideas of

healing is preposterous.

Again, feel free to post anything, anything at all to enlighten us.

 

Hanneke

At 05:37 AM 12/04/2008, you wrote:

At 06:33 AM 4/11/2008, you

wrote:

I remember reading some stuff that said molecules were affected, and it

made sense to me. What you're saying also makes sense to me.....But, I

just received the info below, and thought it interesting in light of the

fact we had just been discussing it. Dr. Mirkin is usually pretty

good...I though the article was interesting, as was the study done at

Cornell Univ. While I haven't made up my mind yet, I'm not discounting

it.....I think I need to learn a bit more about it before I definitively

make up my mind one way or the other. It seems hard to believe that some

change doesn't occur when things are micro-waved. It surprised me to read

that there was less loss of vitamin C when micro-waving food versus other

cooking methods. I would have thought there would have been more

loss

IMO, part of the problem I see with the natural community, is many

beliefs aren't based on hard science, but by observation and word of

mouth. I wish there were more scientists in the natural community.

..Preferably, ones who would perform objective tests, not ones to support

a particular idea or belief. I don't see it as mutually exclusive -

science and natural methods...But, I think it's difficult, if one

believes certain things to not try and find stuff that supports them.

But, IMO, the only way some of what the natural community believes is

going to be widely accepted, or accepted by certain people, is hard

scientific data. Dunno, may not be a popular view, it's just what I

happen to believe.......

Lynn

 

 

I am trying to

remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys

nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food

which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in

the natural healing field.

 

Jackie

 

- Lynn Ward arubyrogers ;

 

;

 

Sharing-Diet-Info Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine

April 13, 2008

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

 

A report from the

nutrition department of Cornell University should convince you that microwaving food does not destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods. Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek, March 14, 2008). Microwave ovens use

electromagnetic waves that vibrate water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most

nutrients in food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported

in the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture, November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full

power. The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For

nutrient-

rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times. Contrary to myths spread

by a popular natural health newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the

food comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for cooking.

 

 

Checked by AVG.

Version: 7.5.519 / Virus Database: 269.22.12/1374 - Release Date:

11/04/2008 4:59 PM

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This is the article I read in Nexus magazine many years ago, it does have a paragraph about the woman who received blood warmed in a microwave oven, but it has Hans Hertel's experiment and this is what I found so interesting.

 

http://www.knebelhus.dk/Paracelsus/microwave.html

 

Kristine UK

On 12/04/2008, Jane MacRoss <highfield1 wrote:

 

 

I do like this post ....................

 

 

-

Hanneke

Saturday, April 12, 2008 8:15 AM

Re: Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

LynnIf you can come up with any other article, any article at all, about microwave dangers, hazards, other than the article one is referring to in quite a few posts here (without the post under discussion having been produced here)

feel welcome to post it. Thinking in the vein you argued for that we should keep in mind, that many people here might not ever have seen this article before, this article might give a few more guidelines to those and give rise to search further.

Assumptions that those who prefer alternative health modalities over the scientific approach which has proven by now maims and kills people, specifically look for articles that support their ideas of healing is preposterous.

Again, feel free to post anything, anything at all to enlighten us. HannekeAt 05:37 AM 12/04/2008, you wrote:

At 06:33 AM 4/11/2008, you wrote:I remember reading some stuff that said molecules were affected, and it made sense to me. What you're saying also makes sense to me.....But, I just received the info below, and thought it interesting in light of the fact we had just been discussing it. Dr. Mirkin is usually pretty good...I though the article was interesting, as was the study done at Cornell Univ. While I haven't made up my mind yet, I'm not discounting it.....I think I need to learn a bit more about it before I definitively make up my mind one way or the other. It seems hard to believe that some change doesn't occur when things are micro-waved. It surprised me to read that there was less loss of vitamin C when micro-waving food versus other cooking methods. I would have thought there would have been more loss

IMO, part of the problem I see with the natural community, is many beliefs aren't based on hard science, but by observation and word of mouth. I wish there were more scientists in the natural community. .Preferably, ones who would perform objective tests, not ones to support a particular idea or belief. I don't see it as mutually exclusive - science and natural methods...But, I think it's difficult, if one believes certain things to not try and find stuff that supports them. But, IMO, the only way some of what the natural community believes is going to be widely accepted, or accepted by certain people, is hard scientific data. Dunno, may not be a popular view, it's just what I happen to believe.......

Lynn

I am trying to remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in the natural healing field.

Jackie

- Lynn Ward arubyrogers ; ; Sharing-Diet-Info Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine April 13, 2008

Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods

A report from the nutrition department of Cornell University should convince you that microwaving food does not destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin C when microwaved, compared to other cooking methods. Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek, March 14, 2008). Microwave ovens use electromagnetic waves that vibrate water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most nutrients in food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported in the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture, November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full power. The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For nutrient- rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times. Contrary to myths spread by a popular natural health newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the food comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most people use their microwave ovens to reheat food instead of for cooking.

 

Checked by AVG. Version: 7.5.519 / Virus Database: 269.22.12/1374 - Release 11/04/2008 4:59 PM

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Two time cancer survivor, and now a heart patient to boot, I must ask why anybody would want to take the chance of microwaved food...I mean, the Nazis that came up with this back in WWII dropped the use while still in research because of the changes to the food cooked via microwaving. There is an alternate, and I've been using one for over fifteen years....its microwave fast, and the food tastes great..not rubbery, and not ruined by microwaving. Its a hot air oven...different manufacturers have machinery of different make-ups, and hence different results......I'd put a link here to the brand I use, but I don't think I'm allowed to do that..just google hot air oven......it cooks with a heater that gets hot, just like the burner on a stove, and a fan that circulates the hot air...some refer to it as hot air frying...makes great fried chicken without any oil..and all the grease from the chicken winds up in the bottom of the oven for easy clean up. the one I use costs less than

the microwave that I keep around the place to play with the rfid chips...lol..Lynn Ward <lynnward wrote: At 06:33 AM 4/11/2008, you wrote: I remember reading some stuff that said molecules were affected, and it made sense to me. What you're saying also makes sense to me.....But, I just received the info below, and thought it interesting in light of the fact we had just been discussing it. Dr. Mirkin is usually pretty good...I though the article was interesting, as was the study done at Cornell Univ. While I

haven't made up my mind yet, I'm not discounting it.....I think I need to learn a bit more about it before I definitively make up my mind one way or the other. It seems hard to believe that some change doesn't occur when things are micro-waved. It surprised me to read that there was less loss of vitamin C when micro-waving food versus other cooking methods. I would have thought there would have been more loss IMO, part of the problem I see with the natural community, is many beliefs aren't based on hard science, but by observation and word of mouth. I wish there were more scientists in the natural community. .Preferably, ones who would perform objective tests, not ones to support a particular idea or belief. I don't see it as mutually exclusive - science and natural methods...But, I think it's difficult, if one believes certain things to not try and find stuff that supports them. But, IMO, the only way some of what the natural community believes is going to be

widely accepted, or accepted by certain people, is hard scientific data. Dunno, may not be a popular view, it's just what I happen to believe....... Lynn I am trying to remember--fibrofog--but I beleive it isn't that the microwave destroys nutrients but that the microwave changes the energy field of the food which changes the way it affects are body that concerns must people in the natural healing field. Jackie - Lynn Ward arubyrogers ; ; Sharing-Diet-Info Thursday, April 10, 2008 12:48 PM Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods Dr. Gabe Mirkin's Fitness and Health e-Zine April 13, 2008 Microwaving Does Not Harm Foods A report from the nutrition department of Cornell University should convince you that microwaving food does not destroy its nutritional value. Dr. Gertrude Armbruster and her colleagues showed that fruits and vegetables lost the least vitamin C when microwaved,

compared to other cooking methods. Vitamin C is a good indicator of the amount of nutrients lost because it is both water soluble and sensitive to heat (Newsweek, March 14, 2008). Microwave ovens use electromagnetic waves that vibrate water molecules inside food to produce heat. Most nutrients in food are not destroyed by microwaving because they are not in the watery layer. An earlier study from Spain, widely reported in the news media, claimed that microwaving broccoli destroyed all of its antioxidants (Journal of Science in Food and Agriculture, November 2003). However, the researchers in this study cooked the broccoli in almost a cup of water for five minutes at full power. The antioxidants were destroyed by the long cooking in water at a high temperature, not by the microwaves. The length of time vegetables are exposed to hot water determines the amount of water-soluble nutrients lost, whether the cooking is done in a microwave oven, steamer, pot or pressure cooker. For nutrient- rich vegetables from your microwave, use very little water (no more than a tablespoon or two) and short cooking times. Contrary to myths spread by a popular natural health newsletter, the radiation from microwaves is not harmful and has no effect whatever on food other than to heat it up. Once the food comes out of the oven, there are no lingering effects of the microwaves. If you are worried about chemical changes to the nutrients in your food, avoid broiling, grilling, frying or any other method that browns foods. The reason food cooked in a microwave oven is so bland is that the chemical changes caused by high surface temperatures don't happen. That's why most people use their microwave

ovens to reheat food instead of for cooking.

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