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Most of the time it is heard that people overcook meat and there are claims that it is not easy to digest and some even claim that it is carcinogenic when it is overdone. What do you think?
Over cooking destroys the essentials of food and it also produces carcinogenics in it.
Overcooked meat is tough because of what happens to the fat, protein, and sugar molecules; they get fused together, making them difficult to cut, chew, and digest.
Cooking muscle meat at high temperatures and with dry heat toughens the meat, destroys nutrients, and creates carcinogens.
Heterocyclic amines are formed when meat is cooked at high temperatures and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) are formed when fat and juices drip onto the open fire, causing flames. These flames then contain PAHs which adhere to the surface of the meat. Both of these compounds have been shown to cause cancer.
The amino acids in the meat are very sensitive to heat and can be easily damaged. The amino acids, plus the oxygen and iron that is in our blood can all react, which creates fusions between the molecules. This creates toxins that your body can’t use, but you’ll absorb anyway.
Once in your bloodstream, your liver and kidneys will have to eliminate them, which is an added burden for these organs. Even worse, ruined nutrients, or carcinogens, cause reactions between other nutrients and wreak havoc on our bodies, leading to cancer and inflammation.
Hydrolytic Cleavage
You probably know that I like to eat a lot of my animal foods raw but there are some meats which are not at all easy to digest this way, namely, the muscle meats. The reason is because they are tough and in order for our digestive systems to easily use them they need to be broken down in some way. This might be accomplished with an acid such as vinegar or lemon juice, fermentation (as in dried or rotted meat), or by cooking.
Hydrolytic cleavage is the process by which moisture trapped inside the meat while cooking actually slices the strands of protein, thereby tenderizing the meat. Additionally, this trapped water prevents proteins from fusing together and making the meat much less digestible.
How to Properly Cook Your Meat
In order to avoid the toxins created in the cooking process, you should cook your meat with moisture either from water or from fat.
Cook meat submerged in soups
Always trim the fat after cooking, not before. Fat helps to trap moisture in the meat.
Wrap meat in foil when cooking on the grill so as not to lose moisture to the fire.
Cook meats along with vegetables.
Add a coating of stable fats to the meat before cooking (like butter ).
Avoid cooking fast on high heat.
Slow cook.
Meat requires a special cooking technique is that it is so very lean. Fat serves as an insulator. When meat has little fat, heat is conducted more quickly and can toughen the protein. To keep grassfed meat tender, you need to cook it more slowly. If you’re broiling a grassfed steak, for example, place it farther away from the heating element or coals and cook it for a longer period of time. Turn it frequently. But don’t cook it too long! Even the most tender cut of meat will become dry and tough if you overdo it.