On Fri, 22 Oct 2004 02:54:06 GMT, Dog Ma 1 wrote:
Thanks for the link. Looking at the phosphorus and potassium numbers,
it appears they are analyzing the nutrition of _raw_ rice. Check out
the differences between raw and cooked brown rice at the site I
mentioned earlier, and you'll see that phosphorus, magnesium, and
potassium drop to about one-fourth in cooked:
Since minerals like that are non-volatile, cannot be decomposed and are
unlikely to be irreversibly chelated, and assuming that the rice isn't
boiled and drained, they must be comparing equal weights of raw and cooked
rice w/o compensating for water.
-DM
Good point. Unless the minerals evaporate with the steam, they've got to
remain in the pot unless, as you say, the rice is boiled and drained. I
hadn't thought about that.
--
Derek
Mediocrity takes a lot less time and most people won't notice the
difference until it's too late.
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