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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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wrote in message oups.com... No, a chemical change does not take place when you roll oats any more than a chemical change takes place when you eat an apple vs. when you place it in a juicer, then drink the entire result of juice plus apple pulp. Oats are dried to begin with so they do not mold, so any oats you buy whole or rolled are going to be dry. Visually, rolled oats are a little different and I suppose you could make some esoteric, obscure point that that difference could translate into some internal chemical changes in how you perceive the food, but that nonsense aside, rolled oats and whole oats are equivalent nutritionally. Corn Flakes are processed. Rolled oats are not. The application of certain words makes some foods magical and/or hip. "Stone ground", for instance. :-) |
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Oh no. Grapes that are dried into raisins have much more sugar than
grapes. This is a chemical change that has occured. They are not the same nutritionally. 1 raisin has more sugar than the same single grape before it is dried. BUT one oat has exactly the same nutrition if it is whole or if it is rolled. |
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In article .com,
wrote: Oh no. Grapes that are dried into raisins have much more sugar than grapes. This is a chemical change that has occured. They are not the same nutritionally. 1 raisin has more sugar than the same single grape before it is dried. BUT one oat has exactly the same nutrition if it is whole or if it is rolled. Were you born stupid or did you have to practice? Can you describe this "chemical change"? Just where did this sugar come from? -- Dan Abel Petaluma, California, USA |
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"Dan Abel" wrote in message ... In article .com, wrote: Oh no. Grapes that are dried into raisins have much more sugar than grapes. This is a chemical change that has occured. They are not the same nutritionally. 1 raisin has more sugar than the same single grape before it is dried. BUT one oat has exactly the same nutrition if it is whole or if it is rolled. Were you born stupid or did you have to practice? Can you describe this "chemical change"? Just where did this sugar come from? If you're not careful, Dan, you're going to end up having to explain dehydration, evaporation, distillation, and mineral crust on faucets. :-) |
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Dan Abel wrote:
In article .com, wrote: Oh no. Grapes that are dried into raisins have much more sugar than grapes. This is a chemical change that has occured. They are not the same nutritionally. 1 raisin has more sugar than the same single grape before it is dried. BUT one oat has exactly the same nutrition if it is whole or if it is rolled. Were you born stupid or did you have to practice? Can you describe this "chemical change"? Just where did this sugar come from? I can't wait to see his explaination of the chemical change! |
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wrote:
Oh no. Grapes that are dried into raisins have much more sugar than grapes. This is a chemical change that has occured. They are not the same nutritionally. 1 raisin has more sugar than the same single grape before it is dried. BUT one oat has exactly the same nutrition if it is whole or if it is rolled. Wrong. From Book of Food Counts 10 grapes contain 4.1 g carbs (sugar). From http://www.nutritiondata.com/facts-B00001-01c20X4.html 50 raisins contain 21 g carbs. If you multiply the 10 grape count by 5 to get 50 grapes so you are comparing the same amounts it comes out to 20.5 g or rounded to next decimal 21 g carbs - the same! That means 50 grapes with 21 g carbs when dried to 50 raisins will still contain 21 g carbs. No magic, no chemical change, the same 21 g carbs. Dehydration removes water not carbs and it doesn't cause a chemical change. |
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Doug Kanter wrote:
"Bob Myers" wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... Groups like this have great intentions. Sharing recipes, etc. That is part of the live to eat mentality however. I'll say it anyway. A simple, vegetarian, low-salt, low-fat, low calorie diet high in whole grains, fruit, vegetables and fiber is the healthiest way to eat. This involves almost no cooking at all. OK, so you don't wanna cook. That's fine for you, but what on Earth are you doing HERE? Just trying to become an evangelical non-cook, or what? Bob M. Just a guess, but do you remember The Whiners, from early Saturday Night Live episodes? They'd go into restaurants and immediately begin whining about their diverticulitis. The routine was enough to cause the illness. :-) Doug and Wendy Whiner! (hilarious skit) From the current SNL cast you have Debbie Downer. There's one in every crowd ![]() |
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"jmcquown" wrote in message ... Doug Kanter wrote: "Bob Myers" wrote in message ... wrote in message ups.com... Groups like this have great intentions. Sharing recipes, etc. That is part of the live to eat mentality however. I'll say it anyway. A simple, vegetarian, low-salt, low-fat, low calorie diet high in whole grains, fruit, vegetables and fiber is the healthiest way to eat. This involves almost no cooking at all. OK, so you don't wanna cook. That's fine for you, but what on Earth are you doing HERE? Just trying to become an evangelical non-cook, or what? Bob M. Just a guess, but do you remember The Whiners, from early Saturday Night Live episodes? They'd go into restaurants and immediately begin whining about their diverticulitis. The routine was enough to cause the illness. :-) Doug and Wendy Whiner! (hilarious skit) From the current SNL cast you have Debbie Downer. There's one in every crowd ![]() di-ver-tic-u LIIIIIIII-tus. Dee Dee |
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zxcvbob wrote in :
That's why I peel the potatoes and wrap them with chicken skin before baking. Bob P.S. That was meant as a joke, but it actually sounds *really good*. Now I'll have to try it. See, this is how great food starts - with a "what if". Before I scrolled down to read your p.s., I was actually thinking, "I think he's joking, but that sounds kinda good..." ![]() K |
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