| talk
back > topics
The Best Way to Prepare Garlic
Garlic lovers rejoice. Here's some good news for your heart and
your breath.
Lightly cooking garlic to help soften the smell won't
rob it of those heart-protective compounds known as thiosulfinates.
So you can cut back on the mints and start feeling better about
baking, boiling, or sauteing it. Just don't microwave it. Wondering
why?
Get a Crush on Garlic
When researchers set out to see how various preparation methods
affected garlic's ability to break up clusters of artery-clogging
platelets in the bloodstream, they tried boiling, baking, and microwaving
both crushed and uncrushed garlic cloves. Lightly cooked crushed
garlic aced the test -- as long as it wasn't cooked in the microwave.
This cooking method sapped the garlic of all its good-for-you attributes.
No matter how you serve it up, always crush garlic first. Crushing
the cloves is what releases the beneficial thiosulfinates in the
first place.
RealAge Tip of the DAY for December
3, 2007
www.realage.com |