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Nutrional value
editWhat nutrional value does vinegar have? Is it good for you? I consume lots of balsamic vinegar so I would like to know. - Beans
- At http://www.skeptics.com.au/journal/1996/1_vinegar.pdf it says: "Vinegar is a lousy source of essential nutrients. In fact, the Nutritional Value of Australian Foods, the US Department of Agriculture and the British food tables, McCance & Widdowson, all list vinegar as having no fibre (therefore no pectin), no vitamins (therefore no beta carotene), only a mere trace of calcium or iron, and the same amount of protein and amino acids as you will find in one teaspoon of bread crumbs or less (USDA claims nil protein - the number may have been rounded down)." - Barrylb 3 July 2005 07:25 (UTC)
- I know that if you look at the nutritional facts of balsamic vinegar, there is quite a bit of sugar in there. I would believe that those traces of calcium and iron might have come from the manufacturing process. Keep in mind that vinegar is merely a product of fermentation, it's a by-product. It is a little bit like consuming micro-organism urine. - User:LongWalkShortPier 26 May 2006
Vinegar is microorganism urine, just like, wine, beer, bread etc...
Vinegar does not contain a lot of sugar. However, acetic acid has a caloric value of about 3.5 calories per gram (4.5 for sugar).
Pale Complextion from vinegar consumption
editHere's a website that shows that Lord Byron's lengths to get pale skin was the trend of the times:
Okay, so he is not of the Victorian era. However, the pale skin ideal certainly existed during his times.
Discovery ?
editThere is no reference to Persoon in this article.
While Louis Pasteur established in 1864 the formula of acetic fermentation C2H5OH + O2 ←→ C2H4O2 + H2O + 348 kJ, it is the dutch botanist Persoon who first, in 1822, determined the action of Acetobacter suboxydans bactery (which he called Mycoderma aceti) in the oxydation of alcohol, resulting in acetification.
White vinegar.
editRecursive reference there.
Other Medical
edit“Contrary to popular belief, vinegar can be used as a detoxification agent to circumvent urinalysis testing for cannabis.[46][47] “
Needs more citation. How is it contrary to "popular belief"
What is the so called "popular belief"? Is it that vinegar does or does not circumvent testing for cannabis use?
References cited contradict each other. Reference 46 states Vinegar is effective in circumventing testing. Reference 47 states that it is not.