The Missing Ingredient
Copyright 2006 Herbert E Dreyer
You may not have noticed but there is a certain ingredient
missing in the foods we eat which could wreck your life. Take
asparagus for example. Now what could be missing? I am a chef, I
can help you.
I know. I know. Vegetables that are purple are in and you buy
your purple passion asparagus farm fresh. None of that stuff
that's transported 1250 miles on average from factory farms to
reach the produce shelf, exhausted, at your market. Nope. You
get the good stuff, organically grown, from the farmers market
and cook it the only approved, right and correct way; you steam
it (according to a recent study in the Journal of the Science of
Food). Good.
Then you sample it and it tastes kina good. So, what's missing?
Maybe, your chef suggests, you add a little Meyers lemon butter,
some French sea salt and imported, fresh ground black pepper.
Now it tastes really good, you gourmet with a personal chef. But
something's still missing?
Now you read the fine print and find out most of the essential
nutrient folate or vitamin B9 is just not all there and whatever
was there was lost when you cooked it (according to the USDA).
And to make matters worse, it doesn't matter where you bought
the asparagus or even if it is purple, white or green. Because
the only thing The United States Department of Agriculture knows
for sure it that it probably does not have an adequate amount of
folate for you in the first place. Read on.
All right. So folate is colorless, something you cannot taste
and it is something you cannot live without. In fact you and I
and whatever colored asparagus you're eating have something in
common: none of us can live without folate (Andrew D. Hanson,
Horticulture Sciences Department, University of Florida,
personal communication). By deduction we know that the asparagus
made enough for itself, but maybe not enough for you. So how do
you know enough of it there or not there?
You don't, period. Science could tell you, but try and find that
answer. Of course you could have a nutrient analysis done before
cooking and after cooking and you would find out for sure. But
that would set you back a lot of lettuce, if you get my drift.
And the asparagus would not plate up very pretty and I would
quit as your chef.
You say, so what? I knew that was coming. Your life without
adequate folate or vitamin B9? If your primary source of folate
was asparagus then you could end up putting yourself at risk for
a host of devastating health problems. Here's the short list:
heart disease, birth defects, retardation of development (in
children) and low levels can lead to anemia in adults along with
added risk for colon cancer. Oh, your body absolutely needs
folate to make new cells and genetic material. Darn details.
But don't throw out the asparagus, yet.
As science built the story of this missing ingredient, study by
study, and discovered what happens to us when it is not all
there, the Federal Government stepped in to help fix the
problem. But first science proved we were not getting enough
folate from our natural foods. In fact about 50 or so years ago
science proved that food richest in folate is (or was)
asparagus, but it is also found in other green leafy vegetables,
eggs and beans. All this has been published by the USDA and the
FDA. However, in 1998 the Food and Drug Administration began
requiring certain grain manufacturers to fortify their foods
with folic acid, a synthetic form of folate.
And low and behold folate deficiencies are becoming rare,
according to nutritionists (that's what most every licensed
nutritionist you can contact would most likely say--contact a
few and see).
But the levels of folate in our naturally occurring foods are
still to low to sustain our health and we must have our diet
fortified or suffer the consequences. We know this for sure
because science has established it beyond doubt and with
agreement of the Federal Government. In addition, no less an
authority than Harvard University ( at Harvard's Department of
Public Health) says fresh fruits and vegetables alone cannot
provide us with adequate nutrition--we need supplements to fill
in the missing ingredients in our foods.
So we now know there are ingredients missing from our foods that
were there but are not now and we do not know why: the baseline
for getting adequate nutrition from our foods has shifted.
As your chef I recommend it is probably best to eat your
asparagus, steamed and sauced along and pop a vitamin supplement
rich in folate (a daily dose of 400 to 800 mcgs is recommended
by the FDA--check it out with your doctor before you start).
Of course, if you do not like looking for missing ingredients in
your foods you can eat some cereal fortified with folic acid and
other yummy ingredients.