Glycidol: The DNA-Damager in Fried Foods
Glycidol may help explain why people who eat fried foods get more cancer. “The main purpose of frying is to produce foods with good consumer acceptability. However, not all acceptable foods are safe.” Food chemists have been very interested in the newly discovered toxic compounds produced by frying. We’ve been refining vegetable oils for more than a century, but only recently have we discovered that this can produce concerning compounds such as 3-MCPD and, even worse, glycidol. 3-MCPD is considered a nongenotoxic carcinogen with a tolerable daily intake, while glycidol is a known genotoxic carcinogen, meaning it can cause cancer by directly damaging our DNA, as I discuss in my video The Carcinogen Glycidol in Cooking Oils . If a compound is not directly DNA-damaging, it’s assumed that it acts through a mechanism that exhibits a threshold; a so-called no-effect level may exist, a level below which it may not be harmful. But if a compound does damage DNA, it’s generally assumed to...