ZipTheZipper t1_j5g3qpi wrote
Reply to comment by spankybacon in Diets with low potassium are associated with kidney injuries and a culprit in cardiovascular disease by giuliomagnifico
Isn't potassium an element? How could frying destroy it?
zenzukai t1_j5g8sbq wrote
Doesn't everybody fry their potatoes at 10^9 K?
Grokent t1_j5gol1s wrote
Usually because you drain the water out after boiling. If you cook everything in a stew all trace elements will be preserved. This is why a lot of 'poor' meals are soups and stews, to preserve all the nutritional value and calories.
spankybacon t1_j5gx1ob wrote
I looked this up because I wasn't sure. Frying actually just condenses the nutritional value. the Potassium is still very much available regardless of cooking method.
Although apparently boiling is the worst
niv727 t1_j5h6c94 wrote
Yes, the potassium itself doesn’t get destroyed or anything regardless of what you do. The point is that when you just boil it it seeps out into the water and since you don’t tend to drink the water you lose the potassium.
AdAltruistic3990 t1_j5hg7yw wrote
Unless you use the boiled water in the gravy :)
protoopus t1_j5gyn7l wrote
fry it in a cyclotron.
spankybacon t1_j5gx45v wrote
Not sure how this works that's why i asked the stupid question
[deleted] t1_j5gzrgk wrote
[removed]
neglectedselenium t1_j5k4dsi wrote
It gets dissolved in water
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments