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April 2016 Articles

Spiritual Corner: Try the Lamb
Lots of Lambs – NSIP helps lamb production
Frazier Named to Lead NCBA
Using young bulls in multi-sire pastures and cow-to-bull ratios—
Flooded landscapes require special care
Growing Weaned Calves
Beef producers hear about new regulations at field day
Protect Homes and Businesses from Termites after Flooding
Farm Bureau calls on Congress to address Internet sales tax problem
Farm Bureau Pleased by USDA Checkoff Decision for Cuba
Farm Bureau calls for permanent rail maintenance tax credit
Discard flooded fruits, vegetables, experts say
AgCenter wheat, oat field day set for April 20 in Winnsboro
• Food scientist urges people to eat more raw food, less fried food, no burned foo
Spring Fest 2016 scheduled for West Monroe
Foresters hear updates on industry, state budget
AgCenter releases home vegetable gardening guides
Beef, forage field day set for April 26 in Homer
Agritourism workshop set for May 10 in DeSoto Parish
The Best Pecan Pie
Just Rambling April 2016

(21 articles found)

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Food scientist urges people to eat more raw food, less fried food, no burned foo

Food scientist urges people to eat more raw food, less fried food, no burned food Writer: Linda Foster Benedict at 225-578-2937 or lbenedict@agcenter.lsu.edu
(03/09/16) BATON ROUGE, La. – LSU AgCenter food scientist Jack Losso wants to help people eat better so they can be healthier.
Losso has so much to say about the topic that he’s written a 425-page book entitled “The Maillard Reaction Reconsidered: Cooking and Eating for Health.” It’s available in hardback and as an e-book for a Kindle. A soft cover version will be coming out in the summer of 2016.
The Maillard reaction refers to the discovery by French chemist and physician Louis-Camille Maillard (1878-1936) that the reactions of sugars and proteins in the body play a role in diseases such as diabetes and hypertension.
In his book Losso explains how food preparation affects this reaction and how eating too many foods prepared at high temperatures that cause excessive browning, charring or burning may be harmful.
He takes aim at some popular foods – including bacon, peanut butter, pizza and lasagna – and recommends that people severely limit the consumption of these foods in the way they are often prepared.
Losso explains in the book how cooking produces both desirable and undesirable chemicals.
“As the cooking temperature increases, the Maillard reaction generates a mixture of flavorful, often toxic, and sometimes carcinogenic compounds,” he said.
Frying bacon creates the best conditions for the Maillard reaction, he said. The sugars and proteins produce advanced glycation end products, known as AGEs, which play a role in the development of diseases, particularly diabetes. The proteins and fat produce advanced lipid oxidation end products, known as ALEs, which also trigger adverse health effects.
Bacon is also high in salt and not recommended for people watching their blood pressure.
Losso has meticulously pulled together research studies and goes into great detail about how the accumulation of too many AGEs and ALEs and other chemicals in food can be harmful.
Peanut butter is full of AGEs and ALEs, he said, yet children are fed it every day.
“They would be better off eating raw peanuts,” he said.
Losso said people with nut allergies can sometimes better tolerate raw nuts rather than nuts that are heated or cooked in other foods.
More than half his book is dedicated to recommendations on how to eat healthier and cook food to avoid the harmful effects of the Maillard reaction.
For example, pizza is safer to eat by heating it at less than the traditional temperature of 375 degrees or higher, he said.
He recommends using canola, sunflower or safflower oil to prepare pizza because these oils have a higher smoke point than the baking temperature. The smoke point of oil is the temperature at which the oil begins to break down and form acrolein, which is given off as a toxic gas.
“Eating pizza with beer or sweetened, carbonated beverages exacerbates the unhealthy effects,” he said, adding that the beverage of choice is water.
Macaroni and cheese is healthier cooked on the stove top rather than baked, during which the temperatures are higher.
“Try to avoid high temperatures and short times, or HTST,” he said. That’s an acronym he suggests people remember.
Losso encourages people to eat more vegetables and fruits – at least five servings per day, which is the official recommendation
from the U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services. Even though he points out many problems with popular foods in his book, his message is not so much to fear food as it is to know your food. “Everything in moderation is always good advice,” he said. His book is available through Amazon. Jack Losso can be reached at 225-578-3883 or jlosso@agcenter.lsu.edu.

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