Is cooked food "toxic"? |
How the Maillard reaction(s) occur |
Browning, aromas, and flavors. So-called "Amadori products" are the result of early Maillard reactions. Then, brown pigments are created, giving the characteristic color of some cooked foods like bread crust, as well as volatile compounds which give various odors such as roasting aromas. More than 2,000 volatile compounds have been identified (and certainly many more exist) [Finot
Generation of Maillard products depends on variety of factors. The proportions and the amounts of different Maillard products depend on processing time, temperature, water activity, and pH, resulting--
Adaptation and toxicity. One of the main arguments of Instinctive Nutrition is as follows: Since humans have been cooking for only a relatively short period of time, they can't possibly have adapted (in the Darwinian sense) to so many different chemical by-products which don't occur naturally. (Side note of interest: Instincto literature typically claims cooking has only been occurring for the last 10,000 years, when in fact it has been practiced regularly for, at the least, roughly the last 40,000 years according to paleontological evidence, and perhaps considerably longer. (See Fire and Cooking in Human Evolution on this site, including the postscript, for a more in-depth discussion of the evidence for prehistoric fire use.) The aim of this section is to give a brief review of what is known about the toxicological consequences of the Maillard browning reaction.
Both stored and cooked foods contain Maillard products. The second remark is that, since the reaction can and also does occur at room temperature, certainly many of the Maillard compounds are found in uncooked foods, though in different (usually lower) concentrations than in cooked foods. One may also observe that many raw-
The body's normal metabolic processes also produce Maillard molecules via non-food pathways. Finally, there has been a recent growing interest in studying the Maillard reaction in vivo (in living organisms as opposed to in vitro, i.e., in "test tubes" or other situations outside the living organism) and more particularly in relation to diabetes and aging. It is thought that the cross-
Production of Maillard molecules via elevated blood sugar (diabetes, high-
Note again that dietary Maillard molecules involve FOOD proteins, not the BODY'S proteins; there is no reason to believe that Maillard reaction products consumed in food in any way participate in the body's own internal cross-
Metabolic defenses against AGEs. Furthermore, the body is not defenseless, since AGEs forming on body proteins such as collagen are recognized and endocytosed (engulfed) by macrophages [Vlassara
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Are Maillard molecules unnatural?
First of all, since there are no known raw-
(How Important is Genetic Adaptation Regarding Cooking?)
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GO TO PART 1 - Is Cooked Food "Toxic"?
GO TO PART 2 - Does Cooked Food Contain Less Nutrition?
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