Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumWhat Is the Health and Nutritional Value of Mushrooms?
Q. What is the health and nutritional value of mushrooms?
A. Mushrooms may lack the deep green or brilliant red hues consumers have come to associate with nutrient-rich fruits and vegetables, but they are a powerhouse of nutrition and not a white food to be avoided, said Angela Lemond, a registered dietitian nutritionist and spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
Low in calories and fat and cholesterol-free, mushrooms contain a modest amount of fiber and over a dozen minerals and vitamins, including copper, potassium, magnesium, zinc and a number of B vitamins such as folate. Mushrooms are also high in antioxidants like selenium and glutathione, or GSH, substances believed to protect cells from damage and reduce chronic disease and inflammation.
Some studies suggest mushrooms are the richest dietary source of another antioxidant called ergothioneine, or ERGO, which is also present in large amounts in red beans, oat bran and liver. ERGO and other antioxidants are primarily concentrated in the caps, not the stems.
But the nutrient profile of a mushroom varies depending on the type and the method of cultivation, according to Robert Beelman, a professor emeritus of food science and director of the Center for Plant and Mushroom Foods for Health at Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences. His 2017 study, which compared ERGO and GSH in different mushroom types, found levels varied more than twentyfold.
While the common button mushroom carried in most supermarkets in the United States is high in potassium and selenium, Dr. Beelmans study found specialty mushrooms like gray and yellow oyster, shiitake, maiitake and porcini have far higher concentrations of both ERGO and GSH, whereas porcini mushrooms have the highest amounts of ERGO, followed by yellow oyster mushrooms. (The study did not include cremini or portobello mushrooms; they also contain significant, though lower, amounts of ERGO, according to the Mushroom Council.)'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/19/well/eat/what-is-the-health-and-nutritional-value-of-mushrooms.html?
Staph
(6,257 posts)Of course, the low fat/low calorie advantages of mushrooms are negated by all of the lovely butter that I usually cook them in!
longship
(40,416 posts)And yes! Butter is obligatory!
Yummy to the tummy.
WhiteTara
(29,736 posts)getting all those lovely nutrients while we bathe them in butter.
mopinko
(70,394 posts)you arent supposed to talk about anything but id, but of course that rule is regularly abused.
whenever someone asks how to cook some foraged delicacy, the answer is- sauté in butter.