| Cooking with Canned Foods | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Part 1: Canned food can be more nutritional than fresh | |||||||||||||||||||||
Some foodies may look down their noses at commercially-canned foods, but recent studies show that canned foods are just as nutritional, if not moreso, than fresh foods. They can also be a lifesaver for those with little time to cook a nutritious meal. With the potential of a national disaster occuring at any time due to weather or earth movement, it's good to keep your pantry stocked with either commercially or home-canned foods. Before you get to the canned food recipes, let's take a deeper look into the freshness aspects.
Is fresh food better than canned food?
Fresh foods begin losing vitamins as soon as they are picked, and often sit in warehouses or in transit for as long as two weeks before they find their way into the market to sit even longer waiting to be purchased. Fresh fruits and some vegetables are harvested before they are even ripe, and depend upon time and other means to reach the ripened state. Canned foods are harvested at their peak of ripeness and normally cooked and processed from the source within hours, thus preserving more vitamins than their fresh counterparts.
Variety is the spice of life
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