Is re-heated pasta less fattening?
JenniDaisy
Posts: 526 Member
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Replies
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It would certainly seem so. More resistant starch = less calories (hard to say how much though). More relevant IMO is the significantly reduced impact on blood glucose (and therefore insulin)0
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Agreed, I think the important thing is the effect on insulin, and if it helps weightloss then that's a bonus.0
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That's quite interesting, I'll often take pasta cooked the night before into the office to eat.
Thanks for sharing.0 -
I saw that on TV last night and thought it was interesting. I do make a lot of pasta in advance for office lunches both salad and reheated. If not eating fresh cooked pasta is better for blood glucose levels that's good news.0
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Really interesting.0
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Wow. Thanks for the info OP.0
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I looked at this thread title and thought "OH noooooooooo".
but I have now read, it is interesting, but It is probally so MINIMAL that is not worth the time finding it out...0 -
50% decrease in glucose spike for re-heated pasta sounds good. I don't know where that would place it on the glycemic index.0
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WolverhamptonFitness wrote: »I looked at this thread title and thought "OH noooooooooo".
but I have now read, it is interesting, but It is probally so MINIMAL that is not worth the time finding it out...
Ha, I couldn't resist the clickbait title0 -
WolverhamptonFitness wrote: »I looked at this thread title and thought "OH noooooooooo".
but I have now read, it is interesting, but It is probally so MINIMAL that is not worth the time finding it out...
I thought the same.
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WolverhamptonFitness wrote: »I looked at this thread title and thought "OH noooooooooo".
but I have now read, it is interesting, but It is probally so MINIMAL that is not worth the time finding it out...
A 50% reduction in bllod glucose is hardly minimal, especially for those with poor insulin sensitivity
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I was like the others, I saw this on the news this morning and rolled my eyes, but I would be interested to know the figures. Seems promising and we all love to meal prep, so we've probably been doing it for a while now!0
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Interesting. I'm sure it's not much and not worth calculating. I actually prefer pasta the next day.0
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Ah how cool, that's really interesting, seeing as I'm sat here eating rehated pasta and all.0
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And the same for other starchy foods? Like potatoes? Interesting.0
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I just boiled some spaghetti for tonight as a taste test. If the reheating doesn't make the texture much worse I'll be doing it again. Not just for the whole glucose thing, but more colon friendly fiber would be awesome.0
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Nifty!0
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But how to log it?0
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Less fattening...no. Less likely to spike blood sugar and make us more hungry later...evidently yes.
There are still the same number of calories in the cold pasta vs. freshly cooked pasta. If there is a loss of carbs by reheating it, then less calories in the reheated version. Calories are calculated by burning the food and seeing how much energy was released. But I would think there are almost as many calories even in the reheated food unless you plan on burning the pasta (then the energy has already been released prior to going into your body).0 -
You know, crap like this drives me up a wall. It's just a hand-wave to try to get people to microtweak things so they'll keep buying products. Unless you're cutting for a bodybuilding competition or are a professional actor, solving the macro problem of appropriate portions is plenty good enough.0
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Supposedly, it's refrigerated resistant starch that is less absorbed by the body, but I doubt it. A few years ago 2 women wrote a resistant starch diet book. Naturally, they laughed all the way to the bank.0
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Does microwaving food really change it caloric content? I don't think so. Not a significant amount, at the very least. Does it change how your body digests it? Possibly. Does that make a difference as to how much weight you will lose? No.0
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One study on its own is not enough but the results of this one are heartening. Thank you JenniDaisy for drawing it to our attention.
I wonder if the same happens to the starch in bread when it is made into toast seeing as how it has already been heated during baking.
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There were no loss in carbs in the reheated pasta, that I read in the linked article. What they found is that the pasta became a resitant starch and therefor didn't raise blood sugar as high .... like 50% less for the pasta that was cooled and then reheated.
Back about 55 years ago, I worked in a restaurant that served spaghetti as one of it's featured dishes ... We cooked the #9 pasta very al-dente and portioned it out onto a stainless steel try by weight. Then the tray would be covered with saran and refrigerated. When an order for spaghetti would come in later that day, a portion would be plunged back into a cooker of boiling water and brought to proper doneness and heat, sauced and served. Who knew, we were improving the nutritional value of spaghetti with our cook-cool-warm up method!
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There's nothing in the article to justify the "less fattening" tag, all they're really describing is a lowering of the pasta's GI index.0
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