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: Is it true that hot food is more nutritious than cold food?


q0192837465
09-18-2008, 02:16 PM
I'm sure ur parents have always forced u to eat food while it's still hot, claiming that food loses it's nutritional value as soon as it gets cold. Is there any truth to this tho? How about leftovers from the day before? Are those not as nutritious?

Alphamale
09-18-2008, 04:36 PM
Generally speaking heating UP food, makes the food lose nutritional value. My parents have never said anything about eating your food hot = good for you. Heating up food breaks down enzymes and what not. Left over = even less nutrition, although it might taste better..hehe.

willystyle
09-18-2008, 06:58 PM
Raw food is always more nutritional than hot/cooked food.

RRxtar
09-18-2008, 07:22 PM
i once heard its harder for your body to absorb ice cold water than room temperature but i dont know how much it could possibly make a difference

SkinnyPupp
09-18-2008, 08:14 PM
Don't believe that Chinese bullshit. Food is food - calories are calories, nutrients are nutrients. You can change them by cooking them, but they won't "go back to normal" when they get cold. Think about it - does a cooked egg turn back into liquid? Does a steak go raw again?

And the whole hot/cold water thing is bullshit too. It's all just tradition that people adhere to without thinking more of it.

smoothie.
09-18-2008, 09:45 PM
Don't believe that Chinese bullshit. Food is food - calories are calories, nutrients are nutrients. You can change them by cooking them, but they won't "go back to normal" when they get cold. Think about it - does a cooked egg turn back into liquid? Does a steak go raw again?

And the whole hot/cold water thing is bullshit too. It's all just tradition that people adhere to without thinking more of it.



warm drinks after an oily meal vs cold drinks?

SkinnyPupp
09-19-2008, 12:09 AM
warm drinks after an oily meal vs cold drinks?
Why would that make a difference?

Cold drinks turn to warm drinks once you drink them.. Our bodies work to maintain a certain body temperature, and as long as you're not sitting in a freezer, it will do a pretty good job on whatever it is you drink and eat.

BabyblooLexus
09-19-2008, 12:36 AM
SO UNTRUE! lol my mom confessed it is false LOL
ever heard of the raw food diet?
supposedly raw food (ew, obviously excluding meats) is healthier than cooked food

SkinnyPupp
09-19-2008, 06:03 AM
SO UNTRUE! lol my mom confessed it is false LOL
ever heard of the raw food diet?
supposedly raw food (ew, obviously excluding meats) is healthier than cooked food
Yeah humans should never cook food.. makes you wonder why they invented fire in the first place!

Care
09-19-2008, 08:17 AM
/\ We are meant to cook food actually, our systems have adapted over the years to require a healthy balance. Contrary to what the raw food diet may tell you - sometimes cooking/steaming is needed to increase nutritional value

Too much raw food will be hard on your digestive system, too much cooked food will lower your vitamin/mineral intake.

There is no perfect way of eating...blanket statements are the wrong way to go!

SkinnyPupp
09-19-2008, 08:27 AM
Exactly! Eat some food cooked, eat some food raw.

But the question of the OP was whether cooked food 'loses nutrition' when it gets cold.

Ulic Qel-Droma
09-19-2008, 11:54 AM
yeah the cold/hot water is bullshit.

any drink u drink, hot or cold, typically within 5 seconds it cools to your body temperature.

wix
09-19-2008, 02:19 PM
i once heard its harder for your body to absorb ice cold water than room temperature but i dont know how much it could possibly make a difference

this is true, it is better to drink, room temp water when you're exercising, as opposed to ice/cold water. True story =)

SkinnyPupp
09-19-2008, 07:50 PM
this is true, it is better to drink, room temp water when you're exercising, as opposed to ice/cold water. True story =)
After all that, someone comes in and says this...

q0192837465
09-23-2008, 01:16 PM
How that I think about it, I've got a few points to add.

About the raw food thing.
Didt we learn in Bio 12 that all food gets broken down into their basic building blocks once they'r digested. Carbos to glucose, protein to amino acid, fat to glycerol/fatty acid, and DNA/RNA to nucleic acid. So it shouldnt really matter if we cook or eat raw. However, vitamins & other co-enzymes will be decomposed when cooked. So I guess it IS better to eat raw food.

About the hot/cold water
I think it does matter in the sense that cold water causes shock in the body while warm water does not. Eventually water will warm up but I guess during exercise, u dun wanna lose the body temperature that u worked so hard to build up.

BinsentoW
10-05-2008, 10:15 PM
Yeah humans should never cook food.. makes you wonder why they invented fire in the first place!

WRONG!





humans didnt invent fire!


but, ya...theres no difference.

JudeChow
01-11-2009, 03:30 PM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.

DaFonz
01-11-2009, 05:04 PM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.

Are you retarded or did you just fail basic biology? Basic common sense would dictate that it's impossible for cold water to solidify fats in your stomach.

goo3
01-11-2009, 08:08 PM
About the hot/cold water
I think it does matter in the sense that cold water causes shock in the body while warm water does not. Eventually water will warm up but I guess during exercise, u dun wanna lose the body temperature that u worked so hard to build up.

Well, your body is sweating as a way to not overheat. ;)

SkinnyPupp
01-11-2009, 08:31 PM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.
You are a retard.

JudeChow
01-12-2009, 01:25 AM
OK, it is a urban myth that fats solidy if you drink cold water after a meal, no need for the harsh comments. I apologize for the bad info. No one disagree that eating raw foods make your body work harder?

MelonBoy
01-12-2009, 01:42 AM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.

I just lol'd... :thumbsup:, Btw i remember hearing some people say when they mix cold drinks/milk with hot drinks/milk they get diarrhea .. i never had this happen to me but apparently some it has for some people..

Girl
01-12-2009, 03:37 AM
Guys lets play nice and lose the name calling.


-Mod Team

K-Dub
01-12-2009, 08:30 AM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.
LOLOLOLOLO.

yellowpower
01-12-2009, 06:54 PM
this is true, it is better to drink, room temp water when you're exercising, as opposed to ice/cold water. True story =)

Yeah, when you are exercising , think of your heart as a hot pan, and when you drink ice cold water too suddenly, your heart will mess up real bad or something

DaFonz
01-13-2009, 04:01 AM
Yeah, when you are exercising , think of your heart as a hot pan, and when you drink ice cold water too suddenly, your heart will mess up real bad or something

How about I think of my brain as a hot pan and reading you and JudeChow's posts suddenly make my brain mess up real bad?

You drink water. When water goes in your mouth, it's warmed up. When it goes down your throat, it's warmed up. When it gets to your stomach it's warmed up.

So how is the cold water going to affect your heart? Are ice daggers going to suddenly pierce your throat and stab your heart? Is the cold water going to be absorbed into my bloodstream, freeze my fat and cause coagulation in my heart valves?

I'm trying really hard to understand, but really, when it comes down to it, you're a moron.

Hot Karl
01-13-2009, 05:48 AM
this thread is awesome.

after every 3 posts saying it's bullshit another tard comes in and says zomg it's so true!

B-nAnA
01-13-2009, 08:55 PM
yes raw food is better..doesnt mean it tastes better though

SkinnyPupp
01-13-2009, 11:14 PM
Yeah, when you are exercising , think of your heart as a hot pan, and when you drink ice cold water too suddenly, your heart will mess up real bad or something
Oh

My

God.

achiam
01-14-2009, 12:22 AM
The nutritional difference of hot or cold food is nil as your body will heat it up for digestion by the time it reaches the small intestines. Heated food, obviously, denatures the proteins and enzymes of the food - and depending on the food (veggie especially), raw may well be more beneficial; although it should also be remembered that the pH of the stomach would also work to denature many of the proteins.

yellowpower:
The heart would not "mess up." Its rate is not dependent on tiny heat fluctuations brought about by food. Things that affect the heart rate include exercise (increased metabolic rate), or larger temperature changes to the body which necessitate a higher metabolism for more body heat, or the fight or flight response with anxiety being a factor.

Armind
01-14-2009, 12:22 AM
^ Hmm wow, i just learned something that would benefit me lol :thumbsup:

achiam
01-14-2009, 12:25 AM
Raw foods requires your body to work harder to break it down into the most fundamental building blocks. Too much raw foods can also be hard on your liver, again as it is required to work harder. Cold liquids after eating a fatty meal is usually not reccommended as it may solidify fats that you have just consumed.

Incorrect. By the time the stomach has heated and worked on the bolus of food for a period of time, it has already achieved body temperature. When it proceeds further through the digestive system, emulsifiers in bile further work to break down the fats.
In essence, digestion is uniform by the time the small intestine is reached - regardless of whether it was cold or hot when eaten.

f00tzilla
01-28-2009, 08:49 PM
achiam is correct w/ above post.

cooking has multiple effects on the nutritional value of food. For one it denatures protein as achiam said above. Depending on the food you are cooking various things can happen like reducing the bioavailability of certain amino acids e.g. Lysine from Maillard reaction.

there's also significant losses in minerals and vitamins when you cook for instance vegetables. So like a raw carrot would have more vitamin A than the same carrot cooked.

Gumby
01-29-2009, 09:22 AM
Strange enough, one of the few items that benefits from being cooked is a tomato...

Girl
01-29-2009, 12:17 PM
Strange enough, one of the few items that benefits from being cooked is a tomato...

Yup. The heat helps tomatoes release some antioxidant called Lyco-something or other.

StampPad
01-29-2009, 12:21 PM
Yup. The heat helps tomatoes release some antioxidant called Lyco-something or other.

I think its Lycopene which decreases the risk of heart disease from what I remembered learning before. :) At the same time, cooking a tomato actually decreases some nutritional value like a decrease in certain vitmains (Probably C)

impactX
01-29-2009, 09:55 PM
Oh

My

God.

I lol'ed.