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MICHAEL SAUTTER

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Articles Posted: 929  Links Seeded: 7726
Member Since: 3/2006  Last Seen: 5/16/2012

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In the dark: olive oil, milk, butter, and beer

Seeded on Tue Jan 23, 2007 4:59 PM EST
Read ArticleArticle Source: News For Curious Cooks
entertainment, home-garden, food, nutrition, beer, milk, butter, olive-oil, harold-mcgee, lightstruck
Seeded by Michael Sautter
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In my last post I mentioned that olive oil is best stored in the dark. The same is true for milk and butter and beer. It's turning out that all these foods are sensitive to light for similar reasons.

When milk is exposed to light, especially sunlight or to the fluorescent lights in a market, it develops an unpleasant, sulfurous "sunlight" or "lightstruck" flavor. It's been known for a long time that the vitamin riboflavin is involved in this reaction, and a recent report by David Min and colleagues at Ohio State summarizes the current understanding of what happens. It turns out that the off flavor signals significant nutritional losses. When riboflavin absorbs certain frequencies of light, it catalyzes the conversion of ordinary oxygen to an especially reactive "singlet" form. Singlet oxygen in turn attacks the milk fat, producing fragments with grassy aromas, and it attacks the amino acid methionine, producing a compound with an overcooked-vegetable aroma (dimethyl disulfide). It also attacks both the riboflavin that made it, and vitamin D, which we need to absorb the calcium in milk efficiently.

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  • Groups: Foodies!, Nutrition
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  • Public Discussion (2)
lauhal

Excellent information! Now I have to remember to do it!

  • 3 votes
Reply#1 - Tue Jan 23, 2007 7:01 PM EST
stevetherobot

That's why I generally try to avoid beer in clear or green bottles.

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Wed Jan 24, 2007 12:19 PM EST
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