RadishRose
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- Connecticut, USA
Here we go again...
Backyard barbecues come with a new caution: Grilled beef, chicken and fish may boost your risk for high blood pressure.
The same goes for roasting or broiling these foods, because high-temperature cooking is what’s key, according to a new study presented Wednesday at an American Heart Association meeting.
“Our findings suggest that it may help reduce the risk of high blood pressure if you don’t eat these foods cooked well done and avoid the use of open-flame and/or high-temperature cooking methods,” lead researcher Gang Liu of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a release.
Her team’s conclusion is based on surveys of more than 100,000 U.S. adults in health fields revealed that the odds of hypertension are slightly higher for people who prefer meats cooked at high heat compared to ones partial to lower temperature cooking methods.
Now, I recall oh, maybe 30 some years ago it was said that flame-grilled (charred) meats were full of carcinogens. Now this.
Backyard barbecues come with a new caution: Grilled beef, chicken and fish may boost your risk for high blood pressure.
The same goes for roasting or broiling these foods, because high-temperature cooking is what’s key, according to a new study presented Wednesday at an American Heart Association meeting.
“Our findings suggest that it may help reduce the risk of high blood pressure if you don’t eat these foods cooked well done and avoid the use of open-flame and/or high-temperature cooking methods,” lead researcher Gang Liu of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a release.
Her team’s conclusion is based on surveys of more than 100,000 U.S. adults in health fields revealed that the odds of hypertension are slightly higher for people who prefer meats cooked at high heat compared to ones partial to lower temperature cooking methods.
Now, I recall oh, maybe 30 some years ago it was said that flame-grilled (charred) meats were full of carcinogens. Now this.
