Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts

Food sources of Vitamin U



Vitamin U is produced by all flowering plants (angiosperms). Pretty much any vegetable and fruit we eat comes from a flowering plant, so pretty much anything we eat that comes from a plant has some Vitamin U, at least before it is processed. In fact, the only plants or plant-like organisms that don't make Vitamin U are conifers, ferns, mosses, algae and fungi.

In general, vegetables belonging to the Brassicacea family are the best source of Vitamin U. This family includes cabbages, kale, broccoli, kohlrabi, collards and turnips. Other vegetables such as spinach, asparagus and celery also produce abundant amounts of Vitamin U. Fruit are also good sources, but not as good as vegetables. In general, there is more Vitamin U in the leaves and stalks than in the fruit, roots and seeds. Grains seem to have little when fresh, but Vitamin U is made during sprouting. Animal products have little to no Vitamin U as it is not synthesized nor stored in significant amounts in animals.

Several studies have measured the concentration of Vitamin U in various foods. Tables listing some of these results are included below. Many factors affect the amount of Vitamin U in a given vegetable. These factors include storage conditions, storage duration, harvest time, regional variations and species variations. For example, cabbages have more Vitamin U during spring and summer when freshly harvested, with the nutrient slowly degrading with storage. After six months in the fridge, the concentration drops by one third, with faster losses at room temperature. In contrast, when barley is germinated for making beer, the amount of Vitamin U rises over time, affecting the flavor of the end product. In some cases, there are varieties of fruit that produce less Vitamin U. Oranges that have been selected to produce less Vitamin U are used to make juice because Vitamin U breaks down with extended storage and pasteurisation to form dimethyl sulfide, a compound that negatively affects the taste of the product (Sakamoto et al 
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8987599/.) 

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Song, Ji-Hoon, Hae-Rim Lee, and Soon-Mi Shim. 2016. “Determination of S-Methyl-L-Methionine (SMM) from Brassicaceae Family Vegetables and Characterization of the Intestinal Transport of SMM by Caco-2 Cells.” Journal of Food Science 82 (1): 36–43.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27883364


Food (Vitamin U concentration (mg/kg dry weight))

Radish (129-139)
Cabbage (535)
Kimchi cabbage (89-116)
Broccoli (150-350)

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Scherb, J., Kreissl, J., Haupt, S. & Schieberle, P. Quantitation of S-methylmethionine in raw vegetables and green malt by a stable isotope dilution assay using LC-MS/MS: comparison with dimethyl sulfide formation after heat treatment. J. Agric. Food Chem. 57, 9091–9096 (2009).

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19754146

Food (Vitamin U concentration (
mg/kg wet weight))

Celery (176)
Kohlrabi (124)
Leek (94)
Beetroot (89)
Cabbage (81)
White asparagus - Peru spears (161)
White asparagus - Peru stalks (86)
White asparagus - Germany spears (252)
White asparagus - Germany stalks (68)
White asparagus - Greece spears (113)
White asparagus - Greece stalks (101)
Green asparagus - Peru spears (234)
Green asparagus - Peru stalks (109)
Green asparagus - Germany spears (94)
Green asparagus - Germany stalks (53)
Green asparagus - Mexico spears (134)
Green asparagus - Mexico stalks (64)
Tomato (2.8)
Commercial orange juice (0.9)
Commercial strawberry juice (1.8)

Freshly-squeezed orange juice (1.2)
Barley - unprocessed (0.9)
Barley - after 4 days of germination (24)

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Kim, G.-H. Determination of Vitamin U in Food Plants. Food Sci. Technol. Res. 9, 316–319 (2003).

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/fstr/9/4/9_4_316/_pdf

Food (Vitamin U concentration (mg/100g dry weight))

Spinach (45.2)
Pak-choy (34.3)
Kale (23.4)

Sumssukbujaengi - a wild korean leafy vegetable (19.8)
Leaf mustard (19.6)
Bud of aralia (19.3)
Broccoli (18.9)
Asparagus (18.7)
Sanmanul - a wild garlic (14.4)
Crown daisy (11.1)
Burdock (11.0)
Celery (8.3)
Komchi (4.7)
Wasabi (4.7)
Chamchi - a wild korean plant (4.0)
Shepherd’s purse (3.4)
Garlic (2.8)
Onion (2.7)
Green onion (2.6)
Laver (2.2)
Nurukchi (0.8)
Green tea (0.1)
Ginger (not detected)
Seaweed (not detected)
Red chilli (not detected)
Miscellaneous wild korean vegetables (not detected)
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Kovatscheva, E. G. & Popova, J. G. [S-Methylmethionine content in plant and animal tissues and stability during storage]. Nahrung 21, 465–472 (1977).



Food (Vitamin U concentration (mg/kg wet weight))


Cabbage (50-104)
Kohlrabi (81-110)

Turnip (51-72)
Tomato (45-83)

Celery (38-78)
Leeks (66-75)
Garlic leaves (44-64)

Beet (22-37)
Raspberries (27)
Strawberries (14-25)

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Other references

1. 100-600 mg/kg dry weight (Bourgis et al and references within.)