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Conference turris::cooks

Title:How to Make them Goodies
Notice:Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.*
Moderator:FUTURE::DDESMAISONSec.com::winalski
Created:Tue Feb 18 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:4127
Total number of notes:31160

1339.0. "lamb vs beef" by SALEM::MEDVECKY () Mon Aug 22 1988 08:54

    We had barb-q lamb again yesterday and I was wondering how lamb
    compares to beef in terms of chlorestoral etc?  Is it "just
    as bad" for you or what?
    
    Rick
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1339.1Lamb is OKFSHQA1::CGIUNTAMon Aug 22 1988 09:4612
    I don't have all the facts, but my mother is on a strict diet to
    reduce her cholesterol (sp?) as her cholesterol count is up in the
    stratosphere, and I know that she can eat lamb.  She can't have
    beef, but she can eat fish, chicken, pork, veal and lamb.  I know,
    because the folks are coming up for dinner and I have to pass the
    entire menu by her for approval to be sure she can eat everything.
    
    And did you know that radishes are very high in cholesterol?  And
    apple juice is good for breaking it down.  Any other cholesterol
    trivia you'd like to know?
    
    Cathy
1339.3Bad Rap on RadishesDPDMAI::LINDSEYMon Aug 22 1988 10:252
    Cholesterol is only found in animal foods. Vegetables, even their
    oils or "fats", do not contain any cholesterol.
1339.4PuzzledAKOV68::BROWNEight (cats) is enoughMon Aug 22 1988 13:083
Re:  .2

Why is there a recipe for muffins in a Topic entitled "Lamb vs Beef"?
1339.5no cholesterolPARITY::DASILVAMon Aug 22 1988 17:251
    I agree with 3 only animal products contain cholestrol.
1339.6yes cholesterol, but not in amounts worth worrying aboutPSW::WINALSKIPaul S. WinalskiMon Aug 22 1988 17:3715
RE: .5

Sorry, but that is not true.  Cholesterol is a key element in both plant *and*
animal metabolism.  Neither animals nor plants can live without it.  Any
vegetable matter is going to contain some cholesterol from the metabolism
underway when the plant was harvested.

What *is* true is that most plants do not hoard cholesterol and cholesterol-
containing lipids in their fat stores, the way many animals do.  Plant
cholesterol is generally present only in trace amounts.  Also, plant fats
in general contain fewer of the saturated fats that are most readily converted
into cholesterol in the body, and more unsaturated fats (there are exceptions,
such as coconut oil).

--PSW
1339.7Plants? Not from what I've read.16BITS::AITELEvery little breeze....Tue Aug 23 1988 13:159
    Wait a minute - all the books I've read on nutrition say that there
    is ZERO cholesterol in plants.  And the book I have from the Dept
    of Agriculture, called The Composition of Food, lists only animal
    items in their list of foods that contain cholesterol.  Even the
    highly saturated vegetable fats are not cholesterol.  They might
    not be as good for you as the non-saturated fats, but they're not
    as bad as, say, liver or shellfish.
    
    ???
1339.8PSW::WINALSKIPaul S. WinalskiFri Sep 09 1988 23:429
RE: .7

From a nutritional standpoint, the amounts present in plant tissues are
nonexistent.  However, plants must have cholesterol present in trace amounts.
Cholesterol is a metabolic intermediary in several biosynthetic pathways
essential to life, and therefore all cells will have a stray molecule or two
of it kicking around.

--PSW