nice to have someone to bounce ideas with. Let me know if your
interested so I can send you some good literature on this.
Is getting fat really a problem? Or does that mean that your brother
in fact processes food /more/ efficiently than others, and that we
should be looking to people like this to clue us in on how to solve
hunger issues?
--
Nathan McCorkle
Rochester Institute of Technology
College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
By destroy do you mean 'turn to CO2 and heat', or turn into
non-fat/simpler carbon compounds.... non-fat may be more easily
absorbed by the body, which can
then just jump into fatty acid synthesis (consuming simple carbon
compounds are more likely to make you 'fat', than consuming fats)
I'm sorry if I misunderstand, but are you talking about destroying the
condition of 'being fat' or the chemicals known as 'fat'?
As far as I know, eating fat produces ketone bodies, whereas eating
sugar and carbs spike insulin which triggers fat synthesis. Destroying
'fat' chemicals in the gut doesn't sound as effective as destroying
sugars and carbs.
Is this really a valid criticism? It could potentially be applied to
any human activity that isn't related to feeding starving African
children... and yet I still do my homework, go to work, and eat a
little bit more than I strictly need to and nobody seems to be getting
morally indignant about it.
-Dan
Alternatively, omit the levansucrase part: cramping and diarrhea from undigested sucrose will teach you to stop drinking coke in the first place.
romie <ryro...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Re: coke and sucrose content:
It says here (on page 205, in case the link doesn't load right), that
sucrose has a tendency to invert (sucrose -> glucose + fructose) quite
a bit at room-temp (a few temp curves presented):
http://books.google.com/books?id=EiD7ZPwIIEcC&pg=PA205#v=onepage&q&f=false