Eggs
are already a source of vitamin D and this innovation shows us that
the amount can be readily upgraded through feeding. Combined with
omega 3 fats and much of the historic concerns over eggs, largely
misplaced at best, disappear. In fact is can be come a protein of
choice which has been it real place in our diet long before we began
to meddle.
My
mother told me a tale from her childhood in which she consumed a raw
egg every day as a matter of course. This is circa 1910 to 1913.
This was obviously an accepted tradition with plenty of present day
support although I preferred cooked of course. Egg nog is our way
of getting it down.
I do
not know if the chicken coop is making a comeback in reality although
we are accommodating back yard coops now. What is emerging however
is a grower industry out there trying to differentiate their product.
These clear improvements will do that and ultimately force the
industry to make it the standard.
It is
all good.
Abbotsford firm’s
egg has a daily dose of vitamin D
Vita D is the first
egg on the market to deliver an adult’s daily need for the sunshine
nutrient
By Randy Shore,
Vancouver Sun October 31, 2012
An Abbotsford-based
farming innovation firm is launching the first egg that contains 100
per cent of an adult’s current daily requirement of vitamin D, as
defined by Health Canada.
Each Vitala Vita D
Sunshine egg contains 200 IU of vitamin D — about 5 micrograms —
or seven times the amount found in a conventional egg, according to
Bill Vanderkooi, owner of Nutriva, the firm that developed the egg
and feed formula that produces it, and the parent company of Vitala.
A glass of milk
fortified with vitamin D provides about 100 IU.
Vanderkooi is
confident he will find a strong demand for an egg rich in vitamin D,
as Health Canada is revising upward the recommended vitamin D intake
for adults to as much as 800 IU per day, depending on age.
Feed for the hens is
supplemented with plant-sourced vitamin D, said Vanderkooi. The
supplement is produced by Montreal specialty yeast producer
Lallemand.
The vitamin D content
of eggs can be raised as high as 600 IU, according to Vanderkooi’s
feed testing.
There is considerable
interest in vitamin D among scientists. Vitamin D deficiency is
associated with some cancers, bone density disorders, multiple
sclerosis and impaired immune function.
“A lot more
research needs to be done to assess the value of vitamin D for
reducing the risk of all those diseases,” said Dr. Hal Gunn, CEO
of Inspire Health cancer clinic. But, he said, a handful of studies
on vitamin D and cancer have produced dramatic results.
A four-year study at
Creighton University of 1,179 women published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that calcium and vitamin D
reduced the risk of cancer by 60 per cent compared with the group
taking placebos.
“It was very strong
evidence that vitamin D can help prevent cancer,” said Gunn.
Five studies of
particular kinds of cancer have found that people who have higher
levels of vitamin D at the time of diagnosis are half as likely to
have a recurrence or to die from their illness, he said.
People who live in
northerly regions and who stay indoors most of the time are at risk
of having low levels of vitamin D, which is naturally produced by
the skin when exposed to sunlight.
“Supplementing with
vitamin D in a place like Vancouver is really important because many
of us don’t get enough vitamin D from sunshine,” said Gunn. “It
seems to reduce the risk of a whole range of diseases.”
Gunn said a person in
a bathing suit standing in the summer sun can produce more than
10,000 IU of vitamin D, a production rate that would have been quite
normal for humans before the industrial age. Clothing, sunscreen and
indoor lifestyles have all conspired to suppress our natural vitamin
D production.
Eggs from the
10,000-hen flock will appear on the shelves of Overwaitea, Save-On
Foods, Urban Fare, T&T and Choices Markets this week at a cost
of about $3.49 a dozen, roughly 50 to 60 cents more than
conventional table white eggs.
The flock is a
conventional battery cage operation, which helps keep the price of
the eggs affordable for a broader range of people, according to
Vanderkooi.
Vitala also markets a
free-run Omega-3 egg that has 100 IU of vitamin D produced by 20,000
cage-free hens. The Omega-3 eggs sell for about $5.50 a dozen.
1 comment:
Hello thanks for such a nice sharing. it is very informative.
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