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International Specialty Supply Supplying Sprout Companies Throughout the World
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820 East 20th Street Cookeville, TN 38501 USA 931 526 1106
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Sprouts
for Optimum Nutrition healthlibrary.com Sprouts
are considered as wonder foods. They rank as the freshest and most nutritious of
all vegetables available to the human diet. By a process of natural
transmutation, sprouted food acquires vastly improved digestibility and
nutritional qualities when compared to non-sprouted embryo from which it
derives. Sprouted
foods have been part of the diet of many ancient races for thousands of years.
Even to this day, the Chinese retain their fame for delicious mung bean sprouts.
Sprouts provide all the essential vitamins and minerals. They should form a
vital component of our diet. Sprouting requires no constant care but only an
occasional sprinkling of water. All
edible grains, seeds and legumes can be sprouted. Generally the following are
used for sprouting :
Alfalfa,
as the name in Arabic signifies, is the king of all sprouts. Grown as a plant,
its roots are known to burrow as much as 12 meters into the subsoil to bring up
valuable trace minerals of which manganese is especially important to health and
digestion ; it is a vital component of human insulin. Apart from minerals,
alfalfa is also a rich source of vitamins A,B,C,E and K and amino acids. Sesame
seeds are another good source of nourishment. They contain all the essential
amino acids in their 20 per cent protein content and higher concentration of
calcium than does milk. They are high in letichin, unsaturated fats, vitamin E
and vitamin B complex, besides other live nutrients. How
to Sprout On the
following morning, the seeds should be rinsed and the water drained off. Not
more than one-fourth of the jar should be filled with the seeds for sprouting.
Soaking makes the seeds, grains or legumes fatty, pulpy and full of water. It
should, therefore, be ensured that the jar has enough room for the seeds to
expand during sprouting. They will expand about eight times their original size.
The jar should be kept at a place which is exposed neither to chill nor hot
winds. It should also be ensured that the mouth of the jar is not completely
covered so as to allow air in. The seeds should be rinsed and water drained off
three times every day till they are ready to eat. The
seeds will germinate and become sprouts in two or three days from commencement
of soaking, depending on temperature and humidity. Care should always be taken
to ensure that sprouts do not lie in water. They should be kept well drained to
prevent souring. Sprouts are at their optimum level of flavour and tenderness
when tiny green leaves appear at the tips. Their nutritional value is also
optimum. To retain their freshness and nutritional value, they should be placed
in a refrigerator, if they cannot be consumed immediately after reaching
suitable maturity. Sprouts can be kept for several days in this way. Some
caution is necessary in sprouting. Soaking for a longer period than required
makes the seeds rot or ferment. The main factors for germination are water, air,
heat and darkness. There may be poor germination or no germination at all if any
of these factors are not present such as insufficient water, or too much water,
lack of sufficient heat, lack of fresh air, either too cold or too hot
surroundings and too much light. Benefits Sprouted
mung beans, for instance, have a 8.3 increase of water content over dried beans.
Hence the nutritional value of sprouted and dried mung beans can be compared by
multiplying the analysed nutrients of sprouted mung beans by the factor of 8.3.
Based on this criterion, the changes found in sprouted mung beans when compared
with the figures for the beans in the dried state are as follows :
The
increase in protein availability is of great significance. It is a valuable
indicator of the enhanced nutritional value of a food when sprouted. The
simultaneous reduction in carbohydrate content indicates that many carbohydrate
molecules are broken down during sprouting to allow an absorption of atmospheric
nitrogen and reforming into amino-acids. The resultant protein is the most
easily digestible of all proteins available in foods. The
remarkable increase in sodium content supports the view that sprouted foods
offer nutritional qualities. Sodium is essential to the digestive process within
the gastro-intestinal tract and also to the elimination of carbon dioxide.
Together with the remarkable increase in vitamins, sodium materially contributes
to the easy digestibility of sprouts. Dried
seeds, grains and legumes do not contain discernible traces of ascorbic acid,
yet when sprouted, they reveal quite significant quantities which are important
in the body’s ability to metabolise proteins. The infinite increase in
ascorbic acid derives from their absorption of atmospheric elements during
growth. Sprouts
have several other benefits. They supply food in predigested form, that is, the
food which has already been acted upon by the enzymes and made to digest easily.
During sprouting, much of the starch is broken down into simple sugars such as
glucose and sucrose by the action of the enzyme ‘amylase’. Proteins are
converted into amino acids and amides. Fats and oils are converted into more
simple fatty acids by the action of the enzyme lipase. During
sprouting, the beans lose their objectionable gas producing quality. Research
has shown that oligosaccharides are responsible for gas formation. For
maintenance of health, some amount of gas production is necessary but it should
be within safe limits. As the process of germination ends and sprouting begins,
the percentage of oligosaccharides is reduced by 90. Sprouts contain a lot of
fibre and water and, therefore, are helpful in overcoming constipation. Sprouts
are an extremely inexpensive method of obtaining a concentration of vitamins,
minerals and enzymes. They have in them all the constituent nutrients of fruits
and vegetables and are ‘live’ foods. Eating sprouts is the safest and best
way of getting the advantage of both fruits and vegetables without contamination
and harmful insecticides. It
should, however, be ensured that seeds and dried beans are purchased from a
store where they are fresh, unsprayed and packaged as food. Seeds that are
packaged for planting purposes may contain mercury compounds or other toxic
chemicals. |