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Fri, 16 Aug 2002 09:51:47 -0500 |
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Nothing Corny About It -- It's Good For You
Fri Aug 16, 9:05 AM ET
FRIDAY, Aug. 16 (HealthScoutNews) -- Here's a kernel of good news about
sweet corn you can share with friends and neighbors at your next corn roast.
Whether you eat it on the cob, steam it, or cream it, cooking sweet corn
unleashes beneficial nutrients that can substantially reduce your risk of
heart disease and cancer, Cornell University food scientists report in the
current issue of Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry.
When you cook sweet corn, you actually boost its antioxidant activity, their
study says.
"There is a notion that processed fruits and vegetables have a lower
nutritional value than fresh produce," says lead author Rui Hai Liu,
assistant professor of food science. "Those original notions seem to be
false, as cooked sweet corn retains its antioxidant activity, despite the
loss of vitamin C."
Liu and his colleagues cooked sweet corn kernels in batches at 239°F for 10,
25 and 50 minutes. They found the antioxidants in the corn kernels increased
by 22, 44 and 53 percent, respectively.
Antioxidants are substances that protect you against free radicals, which
cause damage to your body from oxidation. Free radicals increase the risk of
cancer and heart disease and have been linked to age-related diseases such
as cataract and Alzheimer's disease.
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