So recently I've been trying to learn more about food additives, cause I used to be scared of aspartame. Today's lesson: Monosodium Glutamate, known as "Natriumglutamat" in Swedish.
First thing that surprised me: It occurs naturally, in extremely high quantities, in most Chinese and Japanese cuisine, including soy beans and seaweed. The artificial food additive is produced by fermentation of foodstuffs rich in carbohydrate, meaning essentially it's made in the same way as yoghurt is made out of milk: Some bacteria nibble on starch, and poop the stuff out.
All in all, that doesn't sound very "artificial" to me. However, there's an important distinguishing factor: Where it occurs naturally, it's evenly divided between D-glutamate and L-glutamate. I'm no chemist, but as far as I can tell, this means their molecules are mirror images of each other - one of them faces left, the other one faces right (in terms of polarization, I would presume, but I don't know). In the food additive MSG, however, 99% the sodium glutamate is forcibly turned into L-glutamate, which is richer in flavour. This might not sound like a big deal, but this can be the difference between a substance being healthy or outright poisonous.
So MSG is bad, because there's an unbalance between left and right? Maybe, but apparently this unbalance can and does occur naturally; soy sauce contains 95% L-glutamate, as does most kinds of steak sauce, and in this case it isn't a chemical additive; it just naturally ferments that way.
Does this substance carry any documented health risks? Only one has been taken seriously by the scientific community; MSG is an excitotoxin, meaning it puts severe stress on nerves if it comes in contact with them. The catch? The stuff can't pierce the blood-brain barrier, so it can't actually reach any important nerves. Not all of the brain or the nervous system is protected by this barrier, however.
Conclusion? Well, the articles I've read are inconclusive. On the one hand, glutamic acid is necessary for our brains to function at all (glutamate is an important neurotransmitter), on the other hand, it may be possible to OD on L-glutamate but nobody knows what this might do. The only thing I've found any solid evidence for, is that MSG does cause weight gain, but that's hardly a surprise.
Sources: Wikipedia, Associated Content, Worldfoodscience.org
torsdag 13 augusti 2009
måndag 10 augusti 2009
Fusion... punch!
Latest in research and development of fusion power:
THE TWO-HUNDRED AND TWENTY FISTS OF FUSION
To you who don't want to read the whole article; it's basically a project to design a device made out of 220 massive pistons, that are to simultaneously slam down on a mixture of deuterium and tritium, causing them to undergo fusion. The idea really is to punch something so hard its atoms start hurting.
I approve of this idea.
THE TWO-HUNDRED AND TWENTY FISTS OF FUSION
To you who don't want to read the whole article; it's basically a project to design a device made out of 220 massive pistons, that are to simultaneously slam down on a mixture of deuterium and tritium, causing them to undergo fusion. The idea really is to punch something so hard its atoms start hurting.
I approve of this idea.
måndag 3 augusti 2009
My Immortal
So Kristin told me that she's reading My Immortal, the horrible horrible fanfiction, for the lulz. I got briefly interested in this piece of evil, and used the power of Google.
Lo and behold, Tara got published!
It's true! You can buy her story in paperback version, for less than five euro (that's probably including shipping, too!)
Listen? Do you hear that?
It's like a million unpublished authors cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
Lo and behold, Tara got published!
It's true! You can buy her story in paperback version, for less than five euro (that's probably including shipping, too!)
Listen? Do you hear that?
It's like a million unpublished authors cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.
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