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EGGS
Topics you will find:
Nutrients in an Egg
Egg Cholesterol Concerns
Healthier Eggs
Egg-safety Tips
Eggs are an excellent nutrient-dense food that packs six grams of protein, a bit of vitamin B-12,
vitamin E, riboflavin, folic acid, calcium, zinc, iron, and essential fatty acids into a mere 75
calories. Second to the lactalbumin protein in human milk, eggs have the highest quality protein
of any food. In addition to being good for the body, eggs can be prepared in a variety of tasty
ways.
We've often heard or read that eggs are bad for the heart because they contain a lot of
cholesterol. Not necessarily! The nutritional logic that gave good eggs a bad rap goes something
like this. Foods high in cholesterol are bad for the heart. Eggs are high in cholesterol. Therefore,
eggs are bad for the heart.
While this may meet the standards of a logical argument, it isn't altogether true. New insights
into the fatty foods/heart disease connection reveal that in people with normal cholesterol
metabolism it's not cholesterol that clogs arteries, it's foods high in saturated and hydrogenated
fats. There is a small proportion of people who are termed "cholesterol sensitive," because their
blood cholesterol levels rise when they eat foods high in cholesterol. In the great majority of the
population, the amount of cholesterol in the diet does not affect blood cholesterol, since
cholesterol is manufactured in the liver regardless of whether or not you eat it in a food.
Saturated fats (and factory-made fats, such as hydrogenated ones) are far greater problems than
dietary cholesterol, and compared with some other foods, eggs are not an especially high source
of saturated fats. (Egg white is almost pure high-quality protein: so if you are a cholesterol-
sensitive person, skip the yolk and eat the white.)
To show you how unfair it is to implicate the egg in cholesterol problems, consider that an egg
contains only two grams of saturated fat and 75 calories versus seven grams of saturated fat and
268 calories in a small (3.5 ounce), lean hamburger patty. Even though a hamburger may contain
only 100 grams of cholesterol as compared with 210 grams in one large egg, most quarter-pound
hamburgers contain four times as much saturated fat as the innocent egg. Eggs actually qualify
for the "low in saturated fat" label.
If the American Heart Association is not concerned about the cholesterol in eggs, neither should
you. In light of the recent evidence clearing cholesterol as a heart-unhealthy food, the American
Heart Association changed its tune and now regards an egg every other day as acceptable for
people with normal cholesterol and those who are not sensitive to dietary cholesterol. Now that
the egg has been found "not guilty" as a cholesterol-raising food, scramble it up and enjoy.
Want more nutritious eggs in your diet? Find out what the hen was fed. In fact, research has
proven that better chicken feed results in better eggs. Free-range hens allowed to forage on
barnyard plant food produce eggs that are lower in cholesterol than commercially-fed caged hens.
Studies comparing eggs from the average hen-laying factory with those of free-range chickens
fed diets high in essential fatty acids showed the chicken on a healthier diet produced eggs higher
in the heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids. Studies are under way to produce what are dubbed
"designer eggs," eggs in which the fatty acid profile of the egg yolk has
been modified by altering the hen's diet. In an interesting experiment, giving hens feed rich in
flax seed and fish oil (with their omega 3 fatty acids) increased the amount of omega 3 fatty acids
in their eggs, producing "omega eggs." Child allergic to eggs? Try, Dr. Sears’ Go Fish Omega-3 Soft Chews. So, even when it comes to
chickens, "you are what you eat." Egg consumers are not used to asking their market managers
how the hens were fed that laid their eggs. Yet, if enough consumers start asking the question
egg buyers would start putting feed information on the labels. The egg of the future will only be
as healthy as the consumer demands.
Bacteria, such as salmonella, seem to appreciate the nutrient quality of the egg inside the shell.
They love to multiply in raw eggs. To protect your family from food poisoning, follow these egg-safety tips:
- Give each egg a check-up before purchasing. Examine the egg for cracks. Turn the
egg over in the carton. If any eggs are stuck to the bottom of the carton, suspect
cracks.
- Don't wash eggs before storing them. Washing may remove the invisible protective
coating surrounding the shell, allowing bacteria to enter.
- Store eggs in the refrigerator in their original carton. This not only keeps the eggs
from absorbing the aroma of other foods, it also keeps them out of those convenient
little egg holders on the refrigerator door, where they don't belong. Door storage is
too warm. (It works for butter, but not for eggs.) Storing them in the carton also
keeps the eggs from absorbing the aroma of other foods.
- Wash hands (and utensils) thoroughly after handling raw eggs.
- Cook eggs thoroughly. To kill the bacteria, fry an egg for three minutes per side,
five minutes total for a poached egg, and seven minutes for a boiled egg. Cook until
both yolk and egg white are firm. Scramble eggs until they're no longer runny.
Sunny-side up eggs with runny yolks are risky.
- Commercial egg products, such as eggnog, have been pasteurized and are therefore,
at least theoretically, safe. Don't use raw eggs in recipes made at home.
- Keep eggs and egg-containing foods refrigerated and avoid letting them set at room
temperature for more than an hour.
- If you're mixing raw eggs into recipes, such as cookie dough, avoid the temptation
to let your child lick the bowl.
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NUTRITIP: Eat Your Eggs
Because eggs are high in cholesterol, they have been lumped together with
meat as nutritional no-nos. Wrong! Studies show that for most people who do
not already have high cholesterol or who are not particularly sensitive to
dietary cholesterol, consuming an egg a day does not significantly elevate
serum cholesterol. Most nutrition experts suggest that one egg three times a
week can be part of a healthful diet. |
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