Raw eggs in smoothies?
Lisa1971
Posts: 3,069 Member
Does anyone do this or is this just a bad idea? Should I stick with egg whites only or is that a bad idea also?
0
Replies
-
Interesting! Thanks for sharing.0
-
You really shouldn't consume raw eggs.
Rocky was wrong0 -
Raw egg could=samonella. Do you rember the huge egg recall in 2010 I think it was because people were getting sick from eggs not getting cooked enough or properly. Raw whole egg and raw egg whites are just a bad idea.0
-
If you want to eat raw or undercooked eggs, look for pasteurized eggs. The US Dept. of Agriculture says they're safe.0
-
In the UK as long it has a red Lion stamped on it you're fine, cos the flock has been vaccinated.0
-
I've been consuming raw eggs in many recipes all my life without incident. You have a 1 in 33,000 chance of a problem and that stat is old.0
-
Thanks for the info everyone!0
-
I've never done it, but honestly salmonella is exaggerated in my opinion.
if it were really bad you wouldn't be able to order eggs at restaurants where the yolk is still runny (I think those are sunny side up?)
I see no problem with it unless it upsets your stomach0 -
Egg yolk, not the whites....they don't mix very well. Scramble the whites.0
-
My Mom always used to put raw eggs in my brother's milkshakes in order to get him to eat them. He is fine...but maybe eggs were safer back in the 70s and 80s? *shrug* Not quite sure....0
-
The chances of getting salmonella from raw eggs that have been properly handled is negligible. Unless you are pregnant, elderly, or have a compromised immune system, go nuts.0
-
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
I thought everyone knew about this by now.
http://jn.nutrition.org/content/128/10/1716.full
No idea why you'd think raw was better than cooked. Heat treatment tends to denature proteins, which breaks bonds, especially strong bonds like disulfide bonds, and makes the protein easier to digest. This is common.0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol
That's because there generally is no proof for a lot of the claims you make about clean eating, etc. We demand it because we know it doesn't exist.
Anyway, if you're wondering disulfide bonds are bonds that can occur (among other places) between non-adjacent thiol-containing amino acids in proteins. They often play a part in the tertiary structure of the protein, and must be broken to unfold the protein to properly digest and break apart the amino acids. Hair protein has a lot of disulfide bonds which is one of the reasons it's virtually indigestible.
I have no idea offhand whether egg protein has a lot of disulfide bonds. I'm just using it as an example of a way that heat denaturing (ie, cooking) can make a protein more digestible.0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol
That's because there generally is no proof for a lot of the claims you make about clean eating, etc. We demand it because we know it doesn't exist.
Anyway, if you're wondering disulfide bonds are bonds that can occur (among other places) between non-adjacent thiol-containing amino acids in proteins. They often play a part in the tertiary structure of the protein, and must be broken to unfold the protein to properly digest and break apart the amino acids. Hair protein has a lot of disulfide bonds which is one of the reasons it's virtually indigestible.
I have no idea offhand whether egg protein has a lot of disulfide bonds. I'm just using it as an example of a way that heat denaturing (ie, cooking) can make a protein more digestible.
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol
That's because there generally is no proof for a lot of the claims you make about clean eating, etc. We demand it because we know it doesn't exist.
Anyway, if you're wondering disulfide bonds are bonds that can occur (among other places) between non-adjacent thiol-containing amino acids in proteins. They often play a part in the tertiary structure of the protein, and must be broken to unfold the protein to properly digest and break apart the amino acids. Hair protein has a lot of disulfide bonds which is one of the reasons it's virtually indigestible.
I have no idea offhand whether egg protein has a lot of disulfide bonds. I'm just using it as an example of a way that heat denaturing (ie, cooking) can make a protein more digestible.
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.
Well it's nothing new that you listen to people who have no idea what they're talking about. That's why you believe all these things for which there is no evidence0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol
That's because there generally is no proof for a lot of the claims you make about clean eating, etc. We demand it because we know it doesn't exist.
Anyway, if you're wondering disulfide bonds are bonds that can occur (among other places) between non-adjacent thiol-containing amino acids in proteins. They often play a part in the tertiary structure of the protein, and must be broken to unfold the protein to properly digest and break apart the amino acids. Hair protein has a lot of disulfide bonds which is one of the reasons it's virtually indigestible.
I have no idea offhand whether egg protein has a lot of disulfide bonds. I'm just using it as an example of a way that heat denaturing (ie, cooking) can make a protein more digestible.
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.0 -
The idea that raw eggs should always be avoided is coming to you from the same people who tell you GMOs are healthy and equivalent to natural crops, and who insist that canola and corn oil (produced by the same GM food industry) is better for you than healthy coconut oil, butter and lard. (Look up the research of Dr. Mary Enig on coconut oil, specifically, and on the hazards of standard vegetable and canola oils.)
Raw eggs have been consumed safely by humans for thousands of years. The trick is, be sure and look for eggs from free roaming hens, ideally organic. I like to buy my eggs from a local market where I know the farmers let their hens have a natural, free-range diet.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/09/02/why-does-this-commonly-vilified-food-actually-prevent-heart-disease-and-cancer.aspx
As a general rule, you should avoid eggs from battery-raised hens. They live in the most deplorable conditions and have been fed and medicated with who knows what, and because of the utter filth in which they live, the chances for salmonella from those eggs are VASTLY worse than they are for organic, free roaming hens eating a natural diet.
AVOID eating just raw egg whites. The avidin in the egg whites, when uncooked, can create a biotin deficiency, however if you consume the WHOLE eggs raw, the yolks are a great source of biotin, so a biotin deficiency would be unlikely.
If you want, you can just eat the yolks, but I love to make a healthy smoothie with coconut milk, raw eggs, vanilla and a little bit of honey or agave syrup and ice (sometimes I add a little water if I want to thin it out a bit). (BTW - I rarely use agave syrup except for this type of shake because it's hardly a natural, healthy sweetener, but it blends in nicely and doesn't take much to sweeten it nicely.)
Raw eggs should be avoided, but not because they're unsafe. It's because the protein bioavailability is far lower in uncooked eggs than cooked ones.
Oh, and GMO crops are healthy and equivalent to "natural" crops
can you back up the first claim with proof? i didn't know that. i've always thought raw>cooked
really? every time i say something on here one of you jump on me to provide proof, but i'm not allowed to do the same? lol
That's because there generally is no proof for a lot of the claims you make about clean eating, etc. We demand it because we know it doesn't exist.
Anyway, if you're wondering disulfide bonds are bonds that can occur (among other places) between non-adjacent thiol-containing amino acids in proteins. They often play a part in the tertiary structure of the protein, and must be broken to unfold the protein to properly digest and break apart the amino acids. Hair protein has a lot of disulfide bonds which is one of the reasons it's virtually indigestible.
I have no idea offhand whether egg protein has a lot of disulfide bonds. I'm just using it as an example of a way that heat denaturing (ie, cooking) can make a protein more digestible.
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.
Well it's nothing new that you listen to people who have no idea what they're talking about. That's why you believe all these things for which there is no evidence
i literally have no idea where i heard it. you need to back off dude, you're getting annoying again.0 -
I wouldn't chance it, and I don't think it would help the taste at all
I use a whey based protein powder every time I make a smoothie and usually use milk with my fruit instead of juice, so I get enough protein to keep me satisfied for a while.0 -
I did it once.. it was yucky.. I don't like yucky things..0
-
It worked for my grandfather... good enough for me. I still use them from time to time. Never had a problem. And I routinely combine whey/eggs/casein with milk. Mmmm...mmmm.0
-
People in Japan regularly consume raw or 'undercooked' eggs in restaurants and at home and it's pretty much accepted by the government...probably because most eggs are pastured there anyway...0
-
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.
Here ya go coach!!! Thought I'd help you out with this one.
Full article here: http://www.drmercola.net/food/dr-mercola-urges-you-to-eat-more-eggs/
How You Cook Eggs Can Affect the Benefits You Reap from Them
You may have heard the warning of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other public health organizations about how to cook eggs. The recommendation is to thoroughly cook the egg for you to avoid contracting salmonella. However, according to Dr. Mercola, eating eggs raw is the best way to go.
The risk of salmonella only comes from eggs that come from unsanitary conditions – mostly from CAFO’s – and rarely from organic farms. In fact, a study by the British government saw that 23 percent of farms that have caged hens had a high rate of salmonella, while organic flocks had just over four percent and 6.5 percent in free-range chickens. Another study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) showed that about 2.3 million out of 69 billion eggs produced annually in the U.S. are contaminated with salmonella – which is approximately 30,000 eggs. (link)
Aside from salmonella, allergies are also associated with eggs. But Dr. Mercola says that you can only receive allergies from eggs if they are cooked too much, as heating the egg protein alters its chemical shape. The distortion that forms is what causes the allergic reaction. Eating an egg raw will help you avoid allergies and also preserves the many nutrients enclosed in it, such as lutein and zeaxanthin – which help prevent age-related macular degeneration.
Dr. Mercola also shares other recommendations when it comes to eating eggs:
•The texture of the egg white is usually an issue among people, so instead of consuming the egg white, discard it and leave the egg yolk.You may also blend the entire egg into a shake or smoothie.Dr. Mercola shares that he consumes only the yolk and removes the white part because it contains too much protein.
•Do not consume the egg whites without the egg yolk. Egg whites contain avidin, which binds to biotin. When you cook the egg white, the avidin is no longer an issue. If you consume the both yolk and white, there is no danger of having too much avidin because the yolk supplies enough biotin.
•Pregnant women are special cases because they are prone to biotin deficiency, and consuming whole raw eggs may make this worse.Dr. Mercola says that pregnant women have two options: ◦Have your biotin levels tested by urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid (3-HIA). 3-HIA increases as a result of the reduced activity of methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase, a biotin-dependent enzyme.
◦When you find that you are deficient, you may take a biotin supplement or consume only the yolk raw, with the white cooked.
•If you don’t want to eat a raw egg, your next best choice is soft-boiled.
•Eating your eggs scrambled is one of the worst ways to consume them. When eggs are scrambled, the cholesterol inside the yolk becomes oxidized. People who have high cholesterol levels should avoid eating their eggs scrambled.0 -
My mom always made egg nog with raw egg yolks to nourish my baby brother when he wasn't gaining weight. He was a very sickly child and didn't eat well and often the milk and eggs were all the nutrition he was able to get down.
I admit that I ALWAYS eat raw cookie dough and have never gotten sick, but I only consume organic, free range chicken eggs. Virtually everything in life comes with an element of risk (a person could choke to death on a jelly bean). It's up to you to decide if the benefits outweigh the risks but it seems like the risk is pretty low.
Good luck!0 -
see i'd always heard for instance that scrambling eggs is the worst way to eat them in terms of bio availability.
Here ya go coach!!! Thought I'd help you out with this one.
Full article here: http://www.drmercola.net/food/dr-mercola-urges-you-to-eat-more-eggs/
How You Cook Eggs Can Affect the Benefits You Reap from Them
You may have heard the warning of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other public health organizations about how to cook eggs. The recommendation is to thoroughly cook the egg for you to avoid contracting salmonella. However, according to Dr. Mercola, eating eggs raw is the best way to go.
The risk of salmonella only comes from eggs that come from unsanitary conditions – mostly from CAFO’s – and rarely from organic farms. In fact, a study by the British government saw that 23 percent of farms that have caged hens had a high rate of salmonella, while organic flocks had just over four percent and 6.5 percent in free-range chickens. Another study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) showed that about 2.3 million out of 69 billion eggs produced annually in the U.S. are contaminated with salmonella – which is approximately 30,000 eggs. (link)
Aside from salmonella, allergies are also associated with eggs. But Dr. Mercola says that you can only receive allergies from eggs if they are cooked too much, as heating the egg protein alters its chemical shape. The distortion that forms is what causes the allergic reaction. Eating an egg raw will help you avoid allergies and also preserves the many nutrients enclosed in it, such as lutein and zeaxanthin – which help prevent age-related macular degeneration.
Dr. Mercola also shares other recommendations when it comes to eating eggs:
•The texture of the egg white is usually an issue among people, so instead of consuming the egg white, discard it and leave the egg yolk.You may also blend the entire egg into a shake or smoothie.Dr. Mercola shares that he consumes only the yolk and removes the white part because it contains too much protein.
•Do not consume the egg whites without the egg yolk. Egg whites contain avidin, which binds to biotin. When you cook the egg white, the avidin is no longer an issue. If you consume the both yolk and white, there is no danger of having too much avidin because the yolk supplies enough biotin.
•Pregnant women are special cases because they are prone to biotin deficiency, and consuming whole raw eggs may make this worse.Dr. Mercola says that pregnant women have two options: ◦Have your biotin levels tested by urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid (3-HIA). 3-HIA increases as a result of the reduced activity of methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase, a biotin-dependent enzyme.
◦When you find that you are deficient, you may take a biotin supplement or consume only the yolk raw, with the white cooked.
•If you don’t want to eat a raw egg, your next best choice is soft-boiled.
•Eating your eggs scrambled is one of the worst ways to consume them. When eggs are scrambled, the cholesterol inside the yolk becomes oxidized. People who have high cholesterol levels should avoid eating their eggs scrambled.
since this was mercola i did more looking, and basically... you can find a study to back up either argument...
some say scrambling oxidizes the cholesterol, some say it doesn't, some say it does a little bit but that it isn't enough to harm you. some say you should eat eggs raw. some say you shouldn't.
*sigh*0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions