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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Sillycon Valley, California
    Posts
    4,872

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    This sounds yummy angelaslc, I'll have to try it.

    I know a number of people that carry potatoes as their snack of choice when riding. A sweet potato would be good!

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    3,176
    Welcome angelaslc! (We're neighbors!)
    That sounds yummy!

    Re: cooking time
    Isn't it ok to eat potatoes raw? Okay, not exactly a tasty treat, but not toxic, so cooking time is a matter of preference.
    Each day is a gift, that's why it is called the present.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Katy, Texas
    Posts
    1,811
    I routinely slice yams or sweet potatos very thin and dry roast them for a treat for the dogs. Of course by the time they are cooled and ready to store, I've eaten half of them, but since I have a mandoline for slicing, it is easy enough to throw in another cookie sheet full of slices. The way I do it is to bake them at 125 for 6 hours. I could get a dehydrator which would be faster but.... this is doable as well.

    good and crunchy like chips- you could even throw salt on them.

    marni
    marni
    Katy, Texas
    Trek Madone 6.5- "Red"
    Trek Pilot 5.2- " Bebe"


    "easily outrun by a chihuahua."

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    Austria
    Posts
    364
    Malkin, as far as I know it really isn't healthy to eat raw potatoes. I'm not so sure if it is severely poisonous, but you shouldn't use uncooked potatoes because they contain a substance that you get rid of by cooking them. I don't know if this is true for sweet potatoes as well.

    Hmmm you make me crave sweet potatoes. They are not very common here, so I don't get to eat them very often, but I like that sweet flavor very much.

  5. #20
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Salt Lake City
    Posts
    16
    I found this about raw sweet potato:

    Sweet potato shows trypsin inhibitor activity. That means it contains an enzyme inhibitor that blocks the action of trypsin, an enzyme that digests proteins. The trypsin inhibitor prevents the digestion of protein. Sweet potatoes with higher protein levels have more of the trypsin inhibitor. This makes raw sweet potato difficult to digest. The trypsin inhibitor is deactivated by cooking.

    One way the raw food diet helps people is by supplying food enzymes. Food enzymes do part of the work of digesting the raw food. Enzyme inhibitors increase the amount of work that your body needs to do to digest foods. Enzyme inhibitors force your body to produce more digestive enzymes. This uses up resources that could be used to produce detoxifying enzymes. When animals are regularly fed enzyme inhibitors in research, they become sick. Sweet potato should not be eaten raw.
    ______________

    I have an awesome receipe for Cilantro pesto.....it's awesome on roasted sweet potatoes. I'll see if I can dig it up. Other than cilantro it has: garlic, olive oil, pumpkin seeds, brazil nuts, sunflower seeds, sea salt, ground pepper, and lemon.....it's so yummy on veggies, chicken and fish too.
    _________________

    I'll have to try the chips.....6 hours of cooking but sounds good and probably better than the sweet potato ships in stores.

    _______________

    I don't buy white potatoes anymore...the sweet ones are so much better.

  6. #21
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    San Antonio Heights, CA (Upland)
    Posts
    1,067
    Ditto what angelisic said. I was going to say the same thing about avoiding the microwave whenever possible. Eating food cooked in a microwave threatens your health by violently ripping the molecules in your food apart, rendering some nutrients inert, at best, and carcinogenic at its worst. Theoretically, there are small amounts of radiation leaking out through the glass, and possibly around the door if it is not properly sealed. The FDA thinks it is "insignificant" amounts of radiation, but with the rise of cancer in our day and age, I don't trust that it's not giving me cancer. There are many studies that claim there are numerous other health concerns related to running the microwave, including problems with the heart. The Russians, who invented the first microwave, banned microwaves in 1974.

    Now that I'm off that soap box ... ... let me say that I'm so excited that you posted about sweet potatoes. It just so happens I'm making sweet potatoes tonight! I haven't in a long time and I know they are chalked full of nutrients. So far, I've never made a baked sweet potato. I've made sweet potato casserole (like for Thanksgiving) and mashed sweet potatoes, which I'm doing tonight. I think I made baked sweet potato wedges once, which I will try again soon. I learned that when it comes to mashing sweet potatoes, it's better to bake them than boil them, because you lose a lot of nutrients when boiling (as with microwaving, but not as bad). Plus, they come out so much sweeter and tastier in the oven AND they're much easier to peel and cut. It's really hard to cut a raw sweet potato, but when I bake them first, the skins come off very easily and I can squish them into a bowl. I put them on a cookie sheet in the oven for like an hour or so on around 350. They leak a little sometimes, so I put foil on the cookie sheet. I don't seem to need to worry about how long I do them when it's for this purpose. An hour ... an hour and a half. If I were baking to eat as a baked sweet potato and didn't want them leaking out and being overly soft, I'd certainly follow the other instructions you've gotten.

    If you want to try sweet potato wedges, cut them into wedges, drizzle some olive oil over them with salt and pepper and bake them. Can't remember how long, but probably a half an hour-ish? I learned it from Rachael Ray, so you can check her site if you want more specifics. Do you know they have sweet potato fries at El Pollo Loco now? (Assuming you live where they have El Pollo Loco ... I'm in Ca.) I seem to be finding sweet potato fries at more and more places, actually. I think it's a new trend. I'm trying to avoid fried foods as much as possible these days, but if I'm going to have fries, might as well be sweet potato fries. Then I can pretend they're "good" for me. But baking your own sweet potato wedges IS good for you. Hmmmm. Maybe I'll do that tonight instead of mashing them. Hmmmmm.
    GO RIDE YOUR BIKE!!!

    2009 Cannondale Super Six High Modulus / SRAM Red / Selle San Marco Mantra

  7. #22
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    San Antonio Heights, CA (Upland)
    Posts
    1,067
    Funny thing happened. I ended up making baked sweet potato wedges instead of mashed sweet potatoes. My daughter always complains when I make sweet potatoes, but when the plate of sweet potato wedges was going around the table, she started getting nervous that everyone was going to take them all and there wouldn't be enough for her! I was cracking up. While she'd much rather have regular potato wedges, or better yet full on french fries, I guess sweet potato wedges aren't completely yucky!
    GO RIDE YOUR BIKE!!!

    2009 Cannondale Super Six High Modulus / SRAM Red / Selle San Marco Mantra

 

 

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