خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

دوره مقدماتی php
خاصيت سوياي لوبيا
خاصيت سوياي لوبيا




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دوره مقدماتی php

 سویا قرنهاست  كه غذای مردم آسیا مخصوصا چین بوده است . چینی ها آن را همراه با برنج بعنوان غذای اصلی خود مصرف می كنند . ایالات متحده آمریكا بزرگترین تولید كننده سویا می باشد و تقریبا دو سوم محصول كل دنیا را تولید می كند . سویا در ایران بنام (لوبیا روغنی ) ،‌( لوبیا چینی ) سوژا و دانه سویا معروف است .سویا گیاهی است یكساله دارای ساقه پرشاخه ، برگهای آن بیضی ، نوك تیز و سبز رنگ می باشد . میوه آن شبیه لوبیا است كه در هر غلاف آن سه تا پنج دانه جدا از یكدیگر وجود دارد . رنگ دانه سویا بر حسب انواع مختلف متفاوت است و برنگهای زرد ، سفید ،‌سیاه ، خاكستری و خالدار دیده می شود .دانه سویا به بزرگی یك نخود كمی مسطح و گرد است . دانه سیاه سویا بشتر در طب گیاهی مصرف دارد ولی از دانه زرد رنگ آن بیشتر برای روغن گیری استفاده می كنند . سویا بعلت داشتن پروتئین و مواد مغذی در تغذیه انسان بكار می رود .سویا از چین به نقاط دیگر دنیا راه یافته است و بطور وحشی در آن كشور وجود دارد . سویا در حدود 3500 نوع مختلف دارد كه هر كدام آب و هوای مخصوصی را می خواهد .

تركیبات شیمیایی:سویا از نظر  ویتامین های گروه B  بسیار غنی است و دارای مقداری ویتامین های C,D,E,K و كمی كاروتن می باشد . همچنین در سویا كلروفیل و آنتی بیوتیكی بنام كاناوالین یافت می شود.دانشمندان موفق شده اند كه از لوبیای سویا یك نوع آنتی بیوتیك ارزان قیمت تهیه كنند كه مورومیكس نامیده می شود و باكتریهای مضر روده را از بین می برد .جدول زیر مواد موجود در صد گرم دانه خشك و رسیده ،‌جوانه سویا ، شیر سویا و سبوس سویا را نشان می دهد .

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

86گرم 

همانطور كه گفته شد سویا از نظر مواد پروتئینی بسیار قوی است و در كشورهای فقیر از آن بعنوان جانشین گوشت استفاده می كنند . در جدول زیر سویا با گوشت مقایسه شده است.

بنابر این همانطور كه در جدول بالا دیده می شود مقدار پروتئین سویا 1/5 برابر گوشت گاو می باشد و منبعی غنی از پروتئین است . برای درست كردن شیر سویا ، دانه سویا را له كرده و بمدت 24 ساعت تحت تاثیر آب قرار می دهند سپس آنرا صاف می كنند و بدین ترتیب نوشابه ای مانند شیر بدست می آید كه منبع غذایی خوبی است كه می توان بجای شیر گاو مصرف كرد .

روغن سویا كه از فشردن دانه های له شده وسیاه بدست می آید رنگ زرد مایل به قرمز دارد و دارای بوی مخصوصی شبیه بوی لوبیا است و در حرارت 15 در جه منجمد می شود ولی درجه حرارت معمولی حالت روان دارد.خواص داروئی:1) سویا مقوی و باد شكن است.2) دانه سویا ، مدر ، تب بر و ضد سم است .3) در چین دانه سویا را بعنوان ضد سم مصرف می كنند.4) شیر سویا غذای مفیدی برای كودكان است .5) نان سویا برای مبتلایان به بیماری قند بسیار مناسب است  زیرا اولاً ارزش غذایی زیادی دارد ثانیا مواد نشاسته ای كه تبدیل به قند می شود در آن كم است .6) دانه های سبز سویا را له كرده و بصورت ضماد در آورید این ضماد برای زخم های آبله و سایر زخم ها مفید است همچنین برای رفع التهاب و قرمزی پای بچه ها كه در اثر ادرار بوجود آمده مفید می باشد .7) سویا برای مبتلایان به نقرس و رماتیسم و اشخاص ضعیف البنیه بسیار مفید است.8) سس سویا برای تحریك اشتها بكار می رود.9) سس سویا را برای از بین بردن بوی گوشت بكار می برند.10) سس سویا را به غذاهایی كه تردید دارید سالم باشد بزنید سم آنرا خنثی می كند.11) سس سویا ملین ،‌ خنك كننده و ضد سم است.12) اگر زن حامله در معرض خطر سقط جنین باشد به او سس سویا بدهید.13) اگر ادرار كسی بخون آلوده است سس سویا درمان آن است .14) سس سویا برای سوختگی پوست مفید است.15) فرآورده های سویا برای پیشگیری از سرطان مفید است .16) سویا به فعالیت روده ها و دفع منظم سموم كمك می كند.17) سویا مقدار تری گلیسیرین خون را پائین می آورد.18) برای تمیز كردن شریانها از فرآورده های سویا استفاده كنید حتی کسانی که مبتلا به شرائین و در معرض خطر قلبی هستند اگر از سویا استفاده كنند و گوشت را از برنامه غذایی خود حذف كنند بزودی شریانهای آنها تمیز و جوان خواهد بود .19) سویا سنگ كیسه صفرا را شكسته و خارج می سازد و اگر از فرآورده های سویا استفاده كنید در بدن شما سنگ كیسه صفرا تولید نخواهد شد اگر سنگ كیسه صفرا دارید رژیم خود رابه سویا تغییر  دهید.20) سویا برای سلامت روده بزرگ و تنظیم تخلیه و دفع مواد زائد بسیار مفید است.21) سویا موثر برای درمان سرطان كولون است.22) سویا از سرطان سینه جلوگیری می كند.23) سویا منبع غنی هورمون استروژن است بنابراین می توان جانشین هورمونهای مصنوعی در دوران یائسگی باشد . پس خانم ها در دوران یائسگی بهتر است از فرآورده های سویا استفاده كنند .طرز استفاده:فرآورده های سویا زیاد است و بسته به نوع سلیقه می توانید از آنها استفاده كنید مانند شیر سویا ، شیر بریده سویا ،‌بلغور سویا ، سویای بو داده ،‌پروتیئن سویا ، سس سویا ، سویای تخمیر شده ،‌جوانه سویا و غیره .مضرات :مضرات خاصی برای آن بیان نشده است .منبع : www.iranhealers.com


خوراکی های پرخاصیت

باز نشر مطالب بیتوته تنها با ذکر نام و آدرس سایت مجاز می باشد .

لوبیا سویا که به آن دانه سویا یا آجیل سویا (سویا بو داده) هم گفته می شود یکی از انواع بقولات است که امروزه به یکی از رایج ترین مواد غذایی در دنیا تبدیل شده است.

سویا فواید زیادی برای بدن دارد که ما در این مقاله از سایت کوکا به طور کامل خواص سویا را برای سلامتی و لاغری، بارداری، بدنسازی، کودکان و پوست و مو شرح داده ایم.

لوبیا سویا به عنوان یک مرطوب کننده برای درمان پوست خشک عمل می کند، همچنین لوبیا سویا برای کاهش چربی پوست صورت صورت مفید است.

دانه سویا حاوی فیتواستروژن است که چین و چروک پوست را کاهش داده و باعث جوان سازی پوست صورت می شود، همچنین دانه سویا برای درمان لکه های قهوه ای پوست که با افزایش سن ظاهر می شوند، مفید می باشد.

سویا حاوی ویتامین E است که می تواند باعث پاکسازی سلول های مرده پوست شود.

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

ماسک سویا برای پوست صورت

آرد لوبیا سویا را با آب کمی ترکیب کنید و بر روی پوست صورت بمالید، بگذارید 20 تا 25 دقیقه بماند و سپس با آب سرد خوب بشویید.

آرد دانه سویا به عنوان یکی نرم کننده طبیعی مو عمل کرده و موها را صاف و براق می کند.

طرز تهیه ماسک سویا

آرد دانه سویا را با آب مخلوط کنید و بر روی موها بمالید، بگذارید 30 دقیقه بماند و سپس با آب گرم و شامپو خوب بشویید.

اگر ناخن های شکننده دارید مصرف خوراکی لوبیا سویا باعث تقویت ناخن ها می شود، همچنین مالیدن سس سویا بر روی ناخن ها آن ها را مرطوب کرده و عفونت قارچی ناخن را درمان می کند.

دانه سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای ویتامین B و اسید فولیک است که برای زنان باردار مفید بوده و از نقص لوله عصبی در جنین پیشگیری می کند.

دانه سویا منبع غنی از ویتامین های C و E و K و همچنین مواد معدنی مانند کلسیم، منگنز، فسفر، منیزیم، آهن و مس است که برای رشد جنین در دوران بارداری ضروری می باشند.

لوبیا سویا منبع خوبی از ایزوفلاون هاست که از اجزای اساسی سیستم تولید مثل هستند، در طول دوره یائسگی که میزان استروژن به طور قابل توجهی کاهش می یابد ایزوفلاون ها قادر به اتصال به سلول های گیرنده استروژن هستند و می توانند علائم یائسگی مانند نوسانات خلقی، گرگرفتگی و گرسنگی را کاهش دهند.

سویا یک منبع غنی از فیتواستروژن است که مانع از تولید تستوسترون در مردان شده و خطر ابتلا به سرطان پروستات را کاهش می دهد.

شیر سویا و توفو که از لوبیا سویا به دست می آیند حاوی اسید آمینه هایی هستند که باعث افزایش انرژی و استقامت در هنگام ورزش می شود.

دانه سویا حاوی مقادیر زیادی انواع ویتامین های B نی باشد که در بهبود متابولیسم موثر است و باعث تبدیل کربوهیدرات ها و چربی ها به انرژی شده و در نتیجه باعث بهبود استقامت در تمرینات بدنسازی می شوند.

لوبیا سویا پس از تمرینات بدنسازی از اکسیداسیون آنتی اکسیدان های بدن جلوگیری می کند.

پودر سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای آرژنین و پروتئین است و می تواند قبل و بعد از تمرینات بدنسازی استفاده شود تا باعث افزایش عضله سازی و تقویت عضلات شود.

لوبیا سویا حاوی مقادیر بالایی فیبر است که باعث کاهش اشتها شده و به لاغریو  کاهش وزن افراد کمک می کند.

همچنین شیر سویامقادیر قند کمتری از شیر گاو دارد و جذب چربی از روده را کاهش می دهد در نتیجه به لاغری و کاهش وزن کمک می کند.

دانه سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای فیبر و پروتئین است که اگر زیاد خورده شود به چاقی و افزایش وزن کمک می کند.

شیر سویا که از لوبیا سویا خام به دست می آید بهترین جایگزین شیر گاو در نوزادان و کودکان می باشد.

لوبیا سویا توانایی افزایش گیرنده های انسولین در بدن را دارد و در نتیجه به طور موثری باعث کاهش قند خون دیابتی ها و پیشگیری و درمان دیابت نوع دو می شود.

لوبیا سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای فیبر است که برای ببهبود هضم غذا، درمان معده درد و سلامت دستگاه گوارش مفید است.

مقادیر بالای فیبر موجود در دانه سویا باعث افزایش حرکات روده شده و برای پیشگیری و درمان یبوست مفید می باشد.

مطالعات نشان داده که ایزوفلاون های موجود در سویا عملکرد آنزیم تیروئید پراکسیداز را که برای تولید هورمون های تیروئید ضروری است، مهار می کند و می تواند باعث کم کاری تیروئید و بزرگ شدن تیروئید شود.

سویا منبع چربی های سالم و غیر اشباع از جمله اسید لینولئیک و اسید لینولنیک می باشد که باعث کاهش چربی و کلسترول بالای خون و همچنین فشار خون بالا شده و از ابتلا به بیماری های قلبی و آترواسکلروز جلوگیری می کند.

سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای فیبر و آنتی اکسیدان است که اثر رادیکال های آزاد در بدن را کاهش داده و به پیشگیری و درمان انواع سرطان های کولورکتال و کولون و سرطان پستان در زنان کمک می کند.

لوبیا سویا میزان قابل توجهی کلسیم، منیزیم، مس، سلنیوم و روی بوده که برای سلامتی استخوان ها مفید بوده و از ابتلا به پوکی استخوان جلوگیری می کند.

دانه سویا حاوی مقادیر زیادی مس و آهن می باشد که برای تولید گلبول های قرمز، بهبود جریان خون و اکسیژن رسانی به اندام ها مفید می باشد و کم خونی را درمان می کند.

سویا یک منبع بسیار مهم پروتئین است که برای عملکرد متابولیک بدن ضروری بوده و به سلامت کلی بدن کمک می کند.

لوبیا سویا یکی از بهترین منابع پروتئین و جایگزین گوشت و مخصولات لبنی برای گیاهخواران و خام گیاهخواران می باشد.

لوبیا سویا حاوی لسیتین و فیتواسترول هایی است که عملکرد سلول های عصبی در مغز را افزایش می دهند و برای پیشگیری از آلزایمر مفید هستند.

منیزیم موجود در دانه سویا می تواند خطر سردرد میگرنی را کاهش دهد.

دانه سویا غنی از اسید های چرب امگا 3 و فولات است که از آلزایمر پیشگیری کرده و علائم آن را کاهش می دهد.

روغن سویا یک روغن گیاهی است که از دانه سویا استخراج می شود. روغن سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای استرول و اسید های چرب ضروری است و بیشتر از سایر روغن های گیاهی برای سلامتی بدن مفید است.

توجه داشته باشید که بهتر است روغن سویا را ارگانیک تهیه کنید که هیدروژنه و تصفیه نشده باشد و با روغن های دیگر ترکیب نشده باشد.

روغن سویا باعث کاهش کلسترول بالای خون شده و می تواند از ابتلا به آترواسکلروز و بیماری های قلبی پیشگیری کند.

روغن سویا حاوی میزان قابل توجهی ویتامین K می باشد که آسیب سلول های عصبی را کاهش داده و باعث بهبود علائم آلزایمر می شود.

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

مقادیر بالای ویتامین K و کلسیم موجود در روغن سویا رشد استخوان را بهبود می بخشد و برای پیشگیری و درمان پوکی استخوان مفید است.

مقادیر بالای اسیدهای چرب امگا 3 موجود در روغن سویا برای بهبود بینایی و پیشگیری از بیماری های چشمی دژنراسیون ماکولا و آب مروارید مفید می باشد.

روغن سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای ویتامین E می باشد که به عنوان یک آنتی اکسیدان قوی عمل می کند و به درمان جوش صورت، آفتاب سوختگی و درمان زخم کمک می کند.

سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای استروژن است که باعث عدم تعادل هورمونی در مردان می شود و می تواند منجر به ناباروری، اختلال عملکرد جنسی، کاهش تعداد اسپرم و حتی افزایش احتمال ابتلا به برخی سرطان ها در مردان شود.

کودکانی که به شیر گاو حساسیت دارند نباید لوبیا سویا و شیر سویا مصرف کنند.

لوبیا سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای اگزالات ایت و می تواند خطر ابتلا به سنگ کلیه را افزایش دهد.

بیماران مبتلا به آسم  نباید لوبیا سویا مصرف کنند چون ممکن است باعث واکنش های آلرژیک شود.

طبع سویا گرم است.

لوبیا سویا حاوی مقادیر بالای فیبر رژیمی، پروتئین، ویتامین K، ریبوفلاوین، فولات، ویتامین B6، تیامین و ویتامین C و همچنین آهن، منگنز، فسفر، مس، پتاسیم، منیزیم، روی، سلنیوم و کلسیم می باشد.

لوبیا سویا را می توان به صورت دانه سویا خام برای تهیه شیر سویا، پنیر توفو، آرد سویا، سس سویا و پروتئین سویا استفاده کرد، همچنین دانه سویا بوداده را به عنوان آجیل مصرف می کنند.

سویا تراریخته نوعی سویاست که DNA آن را با استفاده از تکنیک های مهندسی ژنتیک تغییر داده اند تا بتوانند مقادیر بالاتر با کیفیت بهتر و مواد مغذی بیشتر را تولید کنند.

یکی از مزایای سویا تراریخته این است که می توان از آن مقادیر بیشتری روغن سویا تولید کرد.

بهتر است بدانید که سویای تراریخته می تواند باعث آسیب کبد، واکنش های آلرژیک و افزایش مرگ و میر نوزادان شود.

اما اگر شما به سلامتی خود اهمیت می دهید و یا گیاهخوار هستید به شما پیشنهاد می کنیم که سویا و روغن سویا را ارگانیک تهیه کنید.

منابع : organicfacts – stylecraze – myfitfuel

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تأثیرات سویا در پیشگیری و نیز کاهش علائم یائسگی، سرطان سینه و سایر سرطان‌ها، بیماری‌های قلب و عروقی، پوکی استخوان و نیز کاهش وزن را همه ما حتی برای یک بار هم که شده شنیده‌ایم. در طی دهه‌ی اخیر شرکت‌های تهیه مکمل‌های سویا در راه تحقیق در خصوص تأثیرات واقعی سویا بر بدن، بازاریابی و نیز تبلیغات در خصوص این تأثیرات هزینه‌های زیادی را متحمل شده‌اند؛ اما با تمام توافق‌ها در خصوص مزایای سویا برای سلامتی، ما معتقدیم که مصرف غذاهای حاوی سویا در مقادیر متعادل و متناسب با کالری رژیم غذایی، به صورت مرتب در برنامه غذایی روزانه می‌تواند تأثیرات خوبی در سلامتی داشته باشد؛ اما مساله آن است که مصرف افراطی و بیش از حد آن هم تأثیرات بد هم به همراه دارد و نیز اینکه ما مصرف لوبیای سویای کامل را بانی اصلی این همه فایده می‌دانیم نه این مکمل‌های به ظاهر استخراج‌شده از سویا. اگرچه شرکت‌های تولیدکننده مکمل‌های سویا شدیداً با وجود این تأثیرات بد مصرف افراطی سویا مخالف‌اند؛ که البته علت آن کاملا واضح است!

 

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

غذاهای سنتی آسیایی حاوی سویا نظیر توفو، تمپه و میسو، یک جزء اصلی رژیم غذایی برای قرن‌ها بوده‌اند که به مرور زمان در رژیم غذایی غربی‌ها هم پیدا شدند. کارخانه‌های مواد غذایی غربی وقتی به تأثیرات واقعی سویا و فراورده‌های آن در سلامت پی بردند به جای ترویج فرهنگ ورود آن به سفره‌های مردم شروع کردند به تولید کارخانه‌ای مکمل‌ها و نیز واردکردن عصاره سویا به رژیم غذایی به صورت مکمل‌های پروتئینی، هات‌داگ‌های غنی‌شده با سویا، نان‌های غنی‌شده با سویا، پنیرها، غلات غنی‌شده، نوشیدنی‌های ورزشی و ده‌ها ترکیب دیگر. در بین همه‌ی این‌ها، شیر سویا، پروتئین خالص سویا و نیز پنیر سویا به عنوان جایگزین‌هایی برای شیر گاو و گوشت قرمز بیش‌ترین توجه را به خود جلب کردند. شرکت‌های تولید مکمل‌های تغذیه‌ای به مرور قرص‌های عصاره سویا را وارد بازار کردند و آن را به عنوان فیتوکمیکالی برای کاهش و پیشگیری از علائم یائسگی، بیماری‌های قلبی عروقی، پیشگیری از سرطان‌ها و نیز استئوپروز مطرح کردند.

برای رسیدن به بیش‌ترین تأثیر سویا در پیشگیری از ابتلا به سرطان سینه لازم

است مصرف سویا از دوران کودکی و نوجوانی شروع شود. به نظر نمی‌رسد شروع مصرف سویا در دوران بزرگ‌سالی تأثیرات چشمگیری در کاهش ابتلا به سرطان

سینه داشته باشد. هرچند تأثیرات می‌تواند از فردی به فرد دیگر متفاوت باشد


البته ناگفته نماند بعضی از این مکمل‌ها برای سلامتی خوب هستند؛ اما از مصرف بعضی از آن‌ها هم جدا لازم است خودداری کنید؛ اما ما در اینجا می‌خواهیم به مزایای خود لوبیای سویا اشاره کنیم. نه این مکمل‌های غذایی و صنعتی؛ پس لوبیای سویا را جایگزین همه‌ی این‌ها کنید:

 

* لوبیای سویا یکی از مواد غذایی گروه حبوبات است که جزا صلی رژیم غذایی آسیایی بوده و از حدود 13000 سال پیش در این قاره پیدا می‌شده.

 

* هر یک لیوان لوبیای سویا حاوی پروتئینی حدوداً به اندازه پروتئین 100 گرم گوشت، مرغ یا ماهی است. از نظر کیفیت نیز کیفیت پروتئین این لوبیا قابل‌مقایسه با پروتئین‌های حیوانی است در حالی که هیچ‌کدام از حبوبات را نمی‌توان از نظر کیفیت پروتئین با گوشت و مرغ و ماهی مقایسه کرد.

 

* لوبیای سویا هم مانند سایر حبوبات هیچ کلسترولی ندارد؛ اما جالب است که محتوای چربی خوب سویا از همه حبوبات بیشتر است. در واقع سویا را می‌توان یکی از منابع چربی امگا 3 در نظر گرفت.

 

* سویا همچنین حاوی مقادیر بالایی از مواد معدنی مخصوصاً کلسیم، آهن و روی است. درست است که بدن ما آهنی که از مواد غذایی گیاهی وارد بدن می‌شود را به کیفیت آهن گوشت و مواد غذایی حیوانی جذب نمی‌کند؛ اما همراه کردن ویتامین C با این غذا بسیار به جذب آهن گیاهی کمک می‌کند؛ مثلاً با خوردن مواد غذایی مثل مرکبات، فلفل قرمز، گوجه‌فرنگی، توت‌فرنگی و کلم بروکلی.

 

1. کاهش علائم و عوارض یائسگی: مصرف روزانه سویا به اندازه 2 تا 3 واحد غذایی سویا در روز می‌تواند به کاهش علائم و عوارض یائسگی کمک کند و البته خیلی وقت‌ها یائسگی را به تعویق بیندازد. یک واحد غذایی سویا معادل است با 3.5 قاشق غذاخوری لوبیای سویا و یا 100 گرم توفو.

 

2. سلامت قلبی و عروقی: محتوای بالای چربی خوب یا همان چربی‌های غیراشباع و امگا 3 در لوبیای سویا آن را به یک ماده غذایی موثر در کاهش چربی خون، تنظیم فشارخون و نیز بهبود وضعیت عملکرد قلبی و عروقی تبدیل کرده است.

 

3. پیشگیری از سرطان‌ها: برای رسیدن به بیش‌ترین تأثیر سویا در پیشگیری از ابتلا به سرطان سینه لازم است مصرف سویا از دوران کودکی و نوجوانی شروع شود. به نظر نمی‌رسد شروع مصرف سویا در دوران بزرگ‌سالی تأثیرات چشمگیری در کاهش ابتلا به سرطان سینه داشته باشد. هرچند تأثیرات می‌تواند از فردی به فرد دیگر متفاوت باشد. لوبیای سویا به دلیل داشتن محتوای بالای پروتئین، فیبر و فیتواستروژن‌های طبیعی است که این خواص را دارد؛ بنابراین تأثیرات مصرف سویای کامل اصلاً با مکمل‌های قرصی سویا قابل قیاس نیست.

اما مصرف سویا برای مردان هم بدون فایده نیست. همان طور که گفتیم سویا سرشار از فیتواستروژن است؛ هورمونی گیاهی که تأثیر مهاری در تولید تستسترون دارد. یا حداقل سعی دارد تولید آن را تنظیم کند. این کاهش در تولید هورمون مردانه تستسترون به طور قابل‌توجهی خطر ابتلا به سرطان پروستات را کاهش خواهد داد.

 

4. پیشگیری از پوکی استخوان: پوکی استخوان هم یک بیماری شدیداً وابسته به تغییرات هورمونی است. فیتواسترژن‌ها یا همان استروژن‌های گیاهی موجود در سویا با ورود به بدن به دلیل شباهت ساختمانی که با استروژن‌های طبیعی دارند می‌توانند به گیرنده‌های استروژنی در بدن متصل شده و همان تأثیرات را بر بدن بگذارند. یکی از این تاثیران استروژن در بدن افزایش جذب کلسیم و تقویت فعالیت سلول‌های استخوان‌ساز است. برای دستیابی به بیش‌ترین تأثیرات سویا در این زمینه از وجود مقدار کافی ویتامین D در رژیم غذایی‌تان اطمینان حاصل کنید.

 

5. سویا در کاهش وزن: ویژگی‌های یک ماده غذایی موثر در کاهش وزن را که دیگر همه ما می‌شناسیم. ماده غذایی که کم‌کالری و کم‌چرب باشد، پرفیبر و پرپروتئین باشد. خب لوبیای سویا هم که همه‌ی این ویژگی‌ها را دارد!

الهه گودرزی

بخش تغذیه و آشپزی تبیان


فرآورده‌های سویا و خواص تغذیه‌ای آن

حقایقی پیرامون شیر سویا

خواص مفید پروتئین سویا

سایه روشن‌های مصرف سویا

سویا سرطان‌ زا است یا ضد سرطان؟

مقایسه گوشت با سویا

سویا در مردان ؛ مفید یا مضر؟

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

سویا برای ریه ها نیز مفید است

سویا و تناسب اندام

مصرف زیاد سویا مضر است

فواید سویا برای بدن

فواید سویا برای بیماری های مختلف

مردم به تاثیر سویا شک دارند!

نشان‌گذاری

عجب سازنده ی این علامت عرب دولاب است
[[رده:نمادهای
نوشتار]]

The soybean (Glycine max), or soya bean,[3] is a species of legume native to East Asia, widely grown for its edible bean, which has numerous uses.

Fat-free (defatted) soybean meal is a significant and cheap source of protein for animal feeds and many packaged meals. For example, soybean products, such as textured vegetable protein (TVP), are ingredients in many meat and dairy substitutes.[4] The beans contain significant amounts of phytic acid, dietary minerals and B vitamins. Soy vegetable oil, used in food and industrial applications, is another product of processing the soybean crop. Traditional unfermented food uses of soybeans include soy milk, from which tofu and tofu skin are made. Fermented soy foods include soy sauce, fermented bean paste, natto, and tempeh.

The main countries growing soybeans are the United States (32% of world total, 2016 forecast), Brazil (31%) and Argentina (18%).

“Soy” originated as a corruption of the Chinese or Japanese names for soy sauce (Chinese: 豉油; pinyin: chǐyóu; Jyutping: si6jau4; Cantonese Yale: sihyàuh) (Japanese: 醤油, shōyu).[5]

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

The etymology of the genus, Glycine, comes from Linnaeus. When naming the genus, Linnaeus observed that one of the species within the species had a sweet root. Based on the sweetness, the Greek word for sweet, glykós, was Latinized.[5] The genus name is not related to the amino acid glycine.

Like some other crops of long domestication, the relationship of the modern soybean to wild-growing species can no longer be traced with any degree of certainty.[12] It is a cultural variety with a very large number of cultivars.[13]

Like most plants, soybeans grow in distinct morphological stages as they develop from seeds into fully mature plants.

The first stage of growth is germination, a method which first becomes apparent as a seed’s radicle emerges.[14] This is the first stage of root growth and occurs within the first 48 hours under ideal growing conditions. The first photosynthetic structures, the cotyledons, develop from the hypocotyl, the first plant structure to emerge from the soil. These cotyledons both act as leaves and as a source of nutrients for the immature plant, providing the seedling nutrition for its first 7 to 10 days.[14]

The first true leaves develop as a pair of single blades.[14] Subsequent to this first pair, mature nodes form compound leaves with three blades. Mature trifoliolate leaves, having three to four leaflets per leaf, are often between 6–15 cm (2.4–5.9 in) long and 2–7 cm (0.79–2.76 in) broad. Under ideal conditions, stem growth continues, producing new nodes every four days. Before flowering, roots can grow 1.9 cm (0.75 in) per day. If rhizobia are present, root nodulation begins by the time the third node appears. Nodulation typically continues for 8 weeks before the symbiotic infection process stabilizes.[14] The final characteristics of a soybean plant are variable, with factors such as genetics, soil quality, and climate affecting its form; however, fully mature soybean plants are generally between 51–127 cm (20–50 in) in height[15] and have rooting depths between 76–152 cm (30–60 in).[16]

Flowering is triggered by day length, often beginning once days become shorter than 12.8 hours.[14] This trait is highly variable however, with different varieties reacting differently to changing day length.[17] Soybeans form inconspicuous, self-fertile flowers which are borne in the axil of the leaf and are white, pink or purple. Depending of the soybean variety, node growth may cease once flowering begins. Strains that continue nodal development after flowering are termed “indeterminates” and are best suited to climates with longer growing seasons.[14] Often soybeans drop their leaves before the seeds are fully mature.

The fruit is a hairy pod that grows in clusters of three to five, each pod is 3–8 cm (1.2–3.1 in) long and usually contains two to four (rarely more) seeds 5–11 mm in diameter. Soybean seeds come in a wide variety sizes and hull colors such as black, brown, yellow, and green.[15] Variegated and bicolored seed coats are also common.

The hull of the mature bean is hard, water-resistant, and protects the cotyledon and hypocotyl (or “germ”) from damage. If the seed coat is cracked, the seed will not germinate. The scar, visible on the seed coat, is called the hilum (colors include black, brown, buff, gray and yellow) and at one end of the hilum is the micropyle, or small opening in the seed coat which can allow the absorption of water for sprouting.

Remarkably, seeds such as soybeans containing very high levels of protein can undergo desiccation, yet survive and revive after water absorption. A. Carl Leopold, son of Aldo Leopold, began studying this capability at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University in the mid-1980s. He found soybeans and corn to have a range of soluble carbohydrates protecting the seed’s cell viability.[18] Patents were awarded to him in the early 1990s on techniques for protecting “biological membranes” and proteins in the dry state.

Like many legumes, soybeans can fix atmospheric nitrogen, thanks to symbiotic bacteria from the Rhizobia group.[19]

Together, protein and soybean oil content account for 56% of dry soybeans by weight (36% protein and 20% fat, table). The remainder consists of 30% carbohydrates, 9% water and 5% ash (table). Soybeans comprise approximately 8% seed coat or hull, 90% cotyledons and 2% hypocotyl axis or germ.[20][citation needed]

100 grams of raw soybeans supply 446 calories and are 9% water, 30% carbohydrates, 20% total fat and 36% protein (table).

Soybeans are an exceptional source of essential nutrients, providing in a 100 gram serving (raw, for reference) high contents of the Daily Value (DV) especially for protein (36% DV), dietary fiber (37%), iron (121%), manganese (120%), phosphorus (101%) and several B vitamins, including folate (94%) (table). High contents also exist for vitamin K, magnesium, zinc and potassium (table).

For human consumption, soybeans must be cooked with “wet” heat to destroy the trypsin inhibitors (serine protease inhibitors). Raw soybeans, including the immature green form, are toxic to all monogastric animals.[21]

Most soy protein is a relatively heat-stable storage protein. This heat stability enables soy food products requiring high temperature cooking, such as tofu, soy milk and textured vegetable protein (soy flour) to be made.

Soy is a good source of protein for vegetarians and vegans or for people who want to reduce the amount of meat they eat, according to the US Food and Drug Administration:[22]

Soy protein products can be good substitutes for animal products because, unlike some other beans, soy offers a ‘complete’ protein profile. … Soy protein products can replace animal-based foods—which also have complete proteins but tend to contain more fat, especially saturated fat—without requiring major adjustments elsewhere in the diet.

The Protein Digestibility Corrected Amino Acid Score (PDCAAS) of soy protein is the nutritional equivalent of meat, eggs, and casein for human growth and health. Soybean protein isolate has a biological value of 74, whole soybeans 96, soybean milk 91, and eggs 97.[23]

Soy protein is essentially identical to the protein of other legume seeds and pulses.[24][25] Moreover, soybeans can produce at least twice as much protein per acre than any other major vegetable or grain crop besides hemp, five to 10 times more protein per acre than land set aside for grazing animals to make milk, and up to 15 times more protein per acre than land set aside for meat production.[26]

All spermatophytes, except for the grass-cereal family, contain soybean-like 7S (vicilin) or 11S (legumin), (S denotes Svedberg, sedimentation coefficients) seed storage globulin proteins. Oats and rice are anomalous in that they also contain a majority of soybean-like protein.[27] Cocoa, for example, contains the 7S globulin, which contributes to cocoa/chocolate taste and aroma;,[28][29][30] whereas coffee beans (coffee grounds) contain the 11S globulin responsible for coffee’s aroma and flavor.[31][32]

Vicilin and legumin proteins belong to the cupin superfamily, a large family of functionally diverse proteins that have a common origin and whose evolution can be followed from bacteria to eukaryotes including animals and higher plants.[33]

2S albumins form a major group of homologous storage proteins in many dicot species and in some monocots but not in grasses (cereals).[34] Soybeans contain a small but significant 2S storage protein.[35][36][37] 2S albumin are grouped in the prolamin superfamily.[38] Other allergenic proteins included in this ‘superfamily’ are the non-specific plant lipid transfer proteins, alpha amylase inhibitor, trypsin inhibitors, and prolamin storage proteins of cereals and grasses.[27]

Peanuts, for instance, contain 20% 2S albumin but only 6% 7S globulin and 74% 11S.[34] It is the high 2S albumin and low 7S globulin that is responsible for the relatively low lysine content of peanut protein compared to soy protein.

The principal soluble carbohydrates of mature soybeans are the disaccharide sucrose (range 2.5–8.2%), the trisaccharide raffinose (0.1–1.0%) composed of one sucrose molecule connected to one molecule of galactose, and the tetrasaccharide stachyose (1.4 to 4.1%) composed of one sucrose connected to two molecules of galactose.[39] While the oligosaccharides raffinose and stachyose protect the viability of the soybean seed from desiccation (see above section on physical characteristics) they are not digestible sugars, so contribute to flatulence and abdominal discomfort in humans and other monogastric animals, comparable to the disaccharide trehalose. Undigested oligosaccharides are broken down in the intestine by native microbes, producing gases such as carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and methane.

Since soluble soy carbohydrates are found in the whey and are broken down during fermentation, soy concentrate, soy protein isolates, tofu, soy sauce, and sprouted soybeans are without flatus activity. On the other hand, there may be some beneficial effects to ingesting oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose, namely, encouraging indigenous bifidobacteria in the colon against putrefactive bacteria.

The insoluble carbohydrates in soybeans consist of the complex polysaccharides cellulose, hemicellulose, and pectin. The majority of soybean carbohydrates can be classed as belonging to dietary fiber.

Raw soybeans are 20% fat, including saturated fat (3%), monounsaturated fat (4%) and polyunsaturated fat, mainly as linoleic acid (table).

Within soybean oil or the lipid portion of the seed is contained four phytosterols: stigmasterol, sitosterol, campesterol, and brassicasterol accounting for about 2.5% of the lipid fraction; and which can be converted into steroid hormones.[40] Additionally soybeans are a rich source of sphingolipids.[41]

The following table shows the nutrient content of green soybean and other major staple foods, each in respective raw form. Raw soybeans, however, aren’t edible and cannot be digested. These must be sprouted, or prepared and cooked for human consumption. In sprouted and cooked form, the relative nutritional and anti-nutritional contents of each of these grains is remarkably different from that of raw form of these grains reported in this table. The nutritional value of soybean and each cooked staple depends on the processing and the method of cooking: boiling, frying, roasting, baking, etc.

Soybeans are a globally important crop, providing oil and protein. In the United States, the bulk of the harvest is solvent-extracted with hexane, and the “toasted” defatted soymeal (50% protein) then makes possible the raising of farm animals (e.g. chicken, hog, turkey) on a large industrial scale. Soybean products are used in a large variety of processed foods.

During World War II, soybeans became important in both North America and Europe chiefly as substitutes for other protein foods and as a source of edible oil. During the war, the soybean was discovered as fertilizer by the United States Department of Agriculture.

Cultivation is successful in climates with hot summers, with optimum growing conditions in mean temperatures of 20 to 30 °C (68 to 86 °F); temperatures of below 20 °C and over 40 °C (68 °F, 104 °F) stunt growth significantly. They can grow in a wide range of soils, with optimum growth in moist alluvial soils with a good organic content. Soybeans, like most legumes, perform nitrogen fixation by establishing a symbiotic relationship with the bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum (syn. Rhizobium japonicum; Jordan 1982). For best results, though, an inoculum of the correct strain of bacteria should be mixed with the soybean (or any legume) seed before planting. Modern crop cultivars generally reach a height of around 1 m (3.3 ft), and take 80–120 days from sowing to harvesting.

Environmental groups, such as Greenpeace and the WWF, have reported soybean cultivation (primarily as a feed crop for animals) and the probability of increased soybean cultivation in Brazil has destroyed huge areas of Amazon rainforest, and is encouraging further deforestation.[45][46][47] However, note that the driving cause of this deforestation is the global demand for meat, which in turn demands huge amounts of land to grow feed crops for livestock. According to the World Bank, animal agriculture is responsible for up to 91% of the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.[48][49][50]

Soil scientists Edson Lobato (Brazil), Andrew McClung (U.S.), and Alysson Paolinelli (Brazil) were awarded the 2006 World Food Prize for transforming the ecologically biodiverse savannah of the Cerrado region of Brazil into highly productive cropland that could grow profitable soybeans.[51][52][53] However, even correcting for poor soils soybeans were an unlikely cash crop for the Cerrado. Soy did not fare well in the low latitudes. More than the heat and humidity, it was a lack of seasons that hampered production. In the higher more northerly latitudes, flowering coincides with the summer solstice, when the plants reach their maximum height. The first soybeans planted in the Cerrado, however, flowered early and, deprived of long summer days, remained stunted. For soy agriculture to take root in Mato Grosso it was first necessary to develop a “tropical soybean”—one that would flower later, giving the plants more time to fully mature. This was accomplished after years of crossbreeding by scientists within Embrapa, the research arm of the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture.[54][55]

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

Human sewage sludge can be used as fertilizer to grow soybeans. Soybeans grown in sewage sludge likely contain elevated concentrations of metals.[56][57]

Soybean plants are vulnerable to a wide range of bacterial diseases, fungal diseases, viral diseases and parasites. One important pest is the corn earworm moth and bollworm, which is the most common and destructive pest of soybean growth in Virginia.[58]

The global production of soybeans is forecast to be 337 million tonnes in 2017–2018,[61] The United States, Brazil and Argentina are the world’s largest soybean producers and represent more than 80% of global soybean production (table).[59][62]

In 2016, the average worldwide yield for soybean crops was 2.8 tonnes per hectare.[62] The three largest yields per hectare were in Turkey, Georgia and Italy, having an average nationwide soybean yield of 4.0 tonnes. The most productive soybean farms in the world in 2016 were in Turkey, with a nationwide average farm yield of 4.3 tonnes per hectare.[62]

In the 1960–1 Dillon round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the United States secured tariff-free access for its soybeans to the European market. In the 1960s, the United States exported over 90% of the world’s soybeans.[63][64] By 2005, the top soybean exporters were Argentina (39% of world soybean exports), United States (37%), and Brazil (16%), while the top importers were China (41% of world soybean imports), European Union (22%), Japan (6%) and Mexico (6%).[65]

Soybeans were a crucial crop in East Asia long before written records began.[66] There is evidence for soybean domestication between 7000 and 6600 BC in China, between 5000 and 3000 BC in Japan and 1000 BC in Korea.[67] Prior to fermented products such as fermented black soybeans (douchi), jiang (Chinese miso), soy sauce, tempeh, natto, and miso, soy was considered sacred for its beneficial effects in crop rotation, and it was eaten by itself, and as bean curd and soy milk.

Soybeans were introduced to Java in Malay Archipelago circa 13th century or probably earlier. By the 17th century through their trade with Far East, soybeans and its products were traded by European traders (Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch) in Asia, and supposedly reached Indian Subcontinent by this period.

By the 18th century, soybeans were introduced to the Americas and Europe. Soy was introduced to Africa from China in the late 19th century, and is now widespread across the continent. They are now a major crop in the United States, Brazil, Argentina, India, and China.

The closest living relative of the soybean is Glycine soja (previously called G. ussuriensis), a legume native to central China.[68]
According to the ancient Chinese myth, in 2853 BC, the legendary Emperor Shennong of China proclaimed that five plants were sacred: soybeans, rice, wheat, barley, and millet.[69]
Cultivation of soybeans took place over long periods of time in the prehistory of modern-day Japan, Korea and Northern China, based on archaeological evidence.

The origin of soy bean cultivation remains scientifically debated. Early Chinese records mention that soybeans were a gift from the region of Yangtze River delta and Southeast China.[70] Recent research, however, indicates that seeding of wild forms started early (before 5000 BC) in multiple locations throughout East Asia[71] The Great Soviet Encyclopedia claims soybean cultivation originated in China about 5000 years ago.[72] Some scholars suggest that soybean originated in China and was domesticated about 3500 BC.[73] However, the oldest preserved soybeans resembling modern varieties in size and shape were found in archaeological sites in Korea dated about 1000 BC.[70][74] Radiocarbon dating of soybean samples recovered through flotation during excavations at the Early Mumun period Okbang site in Korea indicated soybean was cultivated as a food crop in around 1000–900 BC.[74] Soybeans from the Jōmon period in Japan from 3000 BC[71] are also significantly larger than wild varieties.[71][75] The cultivation of soybeans began in the eastern half of northern China by 2000 BC, but is almost certainly much older.[76] Soybeans became an important crop by the Zhou Dynasty (c. 1046 – 256 BC) in China. However, the details of where, when, and under what circumstances soybean developed a close relationship with people are poorly understood. Soy bean was unknown in South China before the Han period.[71] From about the first century AD to the Age of Discovery (15–16th centuries), soybeans were introduced into across South and Southeast Asia. This spread was due to the establishment of sea and land trade routes. The earliest Japanese textual reference to the soybean is in the classic Kojiki (Records of Ancient Matters), which was completed in 712 AD.

Many people have claimed soybeans in Asia were historically only used after a fermentation process, which lowers the high phytoestrogens content found in the raw plant. However, terms similar to “soy milk” have been in use since 82 AD,[77] and there is evidence of tofu consumption that dates to 220.[78]

Soybeans were mentioned as kadêlê (modern Indonesian term: kedelai)[79] in an old Javanese manuscript, Serat Sri Tanjung, which dates around the 12th to 13th century Java.[80] By the 13th century, the soybean had arrived and cultivated in Indonesia; it probably arrived much earlier however, carried by traders or merchants from Southern China.[81]

The earliest known reference to it as “tempeh” appeared in 1815 in the Serat Centhini manuscript.[82] The development of tempeh fermented soybean cake were probably took place earlier, circa 17th century in Java.

By the 1600s, soy sauce spread from southern Japan across the region through the Dutch East India Company (VOC). The soybean probably arrived from southern China, moving southwest into northern parts of Indian Subcontinent by this period.[83]

In 1603, “Vocabvlario da Lingoa de Iapam”, a famous Japanese-Portuguese dictionary, was compiled and published by Jesuit priests in Nagasaki. It contains short but clear definitions for about 20 words related to soyfoods – the first in any European language.

The Luso-Hispanic traders were familiar with soybeans and soybean product through their trade with Far East since at least 17th century. However, it was not until the late 19th century that the first attempt to cultivate soybeans in the Iberian peninsula was undertaken. In 1880, the soybean was first cultivated in Portugal in the Botanical Gardens at Coimbra (Crespi 1935).

In about 1910 in Spain the first attempts at Soybean cultivation were made by the Count of San Bernardo, who cultivated soybeans on his estates at Almillo (in southwest Spain) about 48 miles east-northeast of Seville.[84]

Soybeans were first introduced to North America from China in 1765, by Samuel Bowen, a former East India Company sailor who had visited China in conjunction with James Flint, the first Englishman legally permitted by the Chinese authorities to learn Chinese.[85] The first “New World” soybean crop was grown on Skidaway Island, Georgia in 1765 by Henry Yonge from seeds given him by Samuel Bowen.[86][87][88] Bowen grew soy near Savannah, Georgia, possibly using funds from Flint, and made soy sauce for sale to England.[89] Although, soybean was introduced into North America in 1765, for the next 155 years, the crop was grown primarily for forage.[90]

In 1831, the first soy product “a few dozen India Soy” [sauce] arrived in Canada. Soybeans were probably first cultivated in Canada by 1855, and definitely in 1895 at Ontario Agricultural College.[91]

It was not until Lafayette Mendel and Thomas Burr Osborne showed that the nutritional value of soybean seeds could be increased by cooking, moisture or heat, that soy went from a farm animal feed to a human food.[92][93]

William Morse is considered the “father” of modern soybean agriculture in America. He and Charles Piper (Dr. C. V. Piper) took what was an unknown Oriental peasant crop in 1910 and transformed it into a “golden bean” for America becoming one of America’s largest farm crops and its most nutritious.[94][95][96]

Prior to the 1920 in the USA, the soybean was mainly a forage crop, a source of oil, meal (for feed) and industrial products, with very little used as food. However, it took on an important role after World War I. During the Great Depression, the drought-stricken (Dust Bowl) regions of the United States were able to use soy to regenerate their soil because of its nitrogen-fixing properties. Farms were increasing production to meet with government demands, and Henry Ford became a promoter of soybeans. He In 1931, Ford hired chemists Robert Boyer and Frank Calvert to produce artificial silk. They succeeded in making a textile fiber of spun soy protein fibers, hardened or tanned in a formaldehyde bath, which was given the name Azlon. It never reached the commercial market. Soybean oil was used to paint the automobiles,[97] as well as fluid for shock absorbers.

Tofu was introduced in Japanese American internment camps during World War II, and gradually spread into the mainstream cuisine. New varieties were developed to improve the blandness of soybean oil. The Counterculture in the San Francisco region popularize soy foods. Although practically unseen in 1900, by 2000 they covered upward of 70 million acres, second only to corn, and it became America’s largest cash crop.[98][page needed]

The soybean arrived in the Caribbean in the form of soy sauce made by Samuel Bowen in Savannah, Georgia, in 1767. It remains only a minor crop there, but its uses for human food are growing steadily.[99]

The soybean was first cultivated in Italy by 1760 in the Botanical Garden of Turin. During the 1780s it was grown in at least three other botanical gardens in Italy.[100]

In 1935 soybeans are first introduced to Greece by Anton Brillmayer, an Austrian soybean breeder.[101] By 1939, soybeans have been cultivated in Greece.[102]

An entire book has been published on the history of soybeans and soyfoods in Greece.[103]

Wild soybeans were discovered in northeastern Australia in 1770 by explorers Banks and Solander. In 1804, the first soyfood product (“Fine India Soy” [sauce]) was sold in Sydney. In 1879, the first domesticated soybeans arrived in Australia, a gift of the Minister of the Interior Department, Japan.[104]

The soybean was first cultivated in France by 1779 (and perhaps as early as 1740). The two key early people and organizations introducing the soybean to France were the Society of Acclimatization (starting in 1855) and Li Yu-ying (from 1910). Li started a large tofu factory, where the first commercial soyfoods in France were made.[105]

The soybean first arrived in Africa via Egypt in 1857.[106]

In 1873, Professor Friedrich J. Haberlandt first became interested in soybeans when he obtained the seeds of 19 soybean varieties at the Vienna World Exposition (Wiener Weltausstellung). He cultivated these seeds in Vienna, and soon began to distribute them throughout Central and Western Europe. In 1875, he first grew the soybeans in Vienna, then in early 1876 he sent samples of seeds to seven cooperators in central Europe, who planted and tested the seeds in the spring of 1876, with good or fairly good results in each case.[107] Most of the farmers who received seeds from him cultivated them, then reported their results back to him. Starting in Feb. 1876, he published these results first in various journal articles, and finally in his magnum opus, Die Sojabohne (The Soybean) in 1878. In northern Europe lupin/lupine is known as the “soybean of the north”[108]

A Hitler Youth manual from the 1930s promoted soy beans, which it called “Nazi beans” as an alternative to meat.[109]

The soybean is first in cultivated Transcaucasia in Central Asia in 1876, by the Dungans. This region has never been important for soybean production.[110]

The first reliable reference to the soybean in this region dates from Mexico in 1877.[111]

The soybean first arrived in South America in Argentina in 1882.[112]

Andrew McClung showed in the early 1950s that with soil amendments the Cerrado region of Brazil would grow soybeans.[113] The march of soybeans into deforested areas of the Amazon rain forest would come later.[54]

Soybeans are one of the “biotech food” crops that have been genetically modified, and genetically modified soybeans are being used in an increasing number of products. In 1995, Monsanto company introduced glyphosate-tolerant soybeans that have been genetically modified to be resistant to Monsanto’s glyphosate herbicides through substitution of the Agrobacterium sp. (strain CP4) gene EPSP (5-enolpyruvyl shikimic acid-3-phosphate) synthase. The substituted version is not sensitive to glyphosate.[114]

In 1997, about 8% of all soybeans cultivated for the commercial market in the United States were genetically modified. In 2010, the figure was 93%.[115] As with other glyphosate-tolerant crops, concern is expressed over damage to biodiversity.[116] A 2003 study[117] concluded the RR gene had been bred into so many different soybean cultivars, there had been little decline in genetic diversity, but “diversity was limited among elite lines from some companies”.

The widespread use of such types of GM soybeans in the Americas has caused problems with exports to some regions. GM crops require extensive certification before they can be legally imported into the European Union, where there is considerable supplier and consumer reluctance to use GM products for consumer or animal use. Difficulties with coexistence and subsequent traces of cross-contamination of non-GM stocks have caused shipments to be rejected and have put a premium on non-GM soy.[118]

A 2006 United States Department of Agriculture report found the adoption of genetically engineered (GE) soy, corn and cotton reduced the amount of pesticides used overall, but did result in a slightly greater amount of herbicides used for soy specifically. The use of GE soy was also associated with greater conservation tillage, indirectly leading to better soil conservation, as well as increased income from off-farming sources due to the greater ease with which the crops can be managed. Though the overall estimated benefits of the adoption of GE soybeans in the United States was $310 million, the majority of this benefit was experienced by the companies selling the seeds (40%), followed by biotechnology firms (28%) and farmers (20%).[119] The patent on glyphosate-tolerant soybeans expired in 2014,[120] so benefits can be expected to shift.[121]

In 2010, a team of American scientists announced they had sequenced the soybean genome – the first legume to be sequenced.[122][123]

Among the legumes, the soybean is valued for its high (38–45%) protein content as well as its high (approximately 20%) oil content. Soybeans are the second-most valuable agricultural export in the United States, behind corn.[citation needed] Approximately 85% of the world’s soybean crop is processed into soybean meal and soybean oil, the remainder processed in other ways or eaten whole.[124]

Soybean seed contains 18–19% oil.[125] To extract soybean oil from seed, the soybeans are cracked, adjusted for moisture content, rolled into flakes and solvent-extracted with commercial hexane. The oil is then refined, blended for different applications, and sometimes hydrogenated. Soybean oils, both liquid and partially hydrogenated, are exported abroad, sold as “vegetable oil”, or end up in a wide variety of processed foods.

Soybean meal, or soymeal, is the material remaining after solvent extraction of oil from soybean flakes, with a 50% soy protein content. The meal is ‘toasted’ (a misnomer because the heat treatment is with moist steam) and ground in a hammer mill. Ninety-seven percent of soybean meal production globally is used as livestock feed.[125] Soybean meal is also used in some dog foods.[126]

One of the major uses of soybeans globally is as livestock feed, predominantly in the form of soybean meal. Spring grasses are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, whereas soy is predominantly omega-6. The soybean hulls, which mainly consist of the outer coats of the beans removed before oil extraction, can also be fed to livestock, as well as whole soybean seeds after processing.[127][128]

In addition to their use in livestock feed, soybean products are widely used for human consumption. Common soybean products include soy sauce, soy milk, tofu, soy meal, soy flour, textured vegetable protein (TVP), tempeh, soy lecithin and soybean oil. Soybeans may also be eaten with minimal processing, for example in the Japanese food edamame (枝豆, edamame), in which immature soybeans are boiled whole in their pods and served with salt.

In China, Japan, and Korea, soybean and soybean products are a common part of the diet. Tofu (豆腐 dòufu) is thought to have originated in China, along with soy sauce and several varieties of soybean paste used as seasonings.[citation needed] Japanese foods made from soya include miso (味噌), nattō (納豆), kinako (黄粉) and edamame (枝豆), as well as products made with tofu such as atsuage and aburaage. In Korean cuisine, soybean sprouts (콩나물 kongnamul) are used in a variety of dishes, and are the base ingredient in doenjang, cheonggukjang and ganjang. In Vietnam, soybeans are used to make soybean paste (tương) in the North with the most popular products are tương Bần, tương Nam Đàn, tương Cự Đà as a garnish for phở and gỏi cuốn dishes, as well as tofu (đậu hũ or đậu phụ or tàu hũ), soy sauce (nước tương), soy milk (nước đậu in the North or sữa đậu nành in the South), and đậu hũ nước đường (tofu sweet soup). In India, textured vegetable protein is often called meal maker or soya chunks and is a popular substitute for meat.

Soy flour refers to soybeans ground finely enough to pass through a 100-mesh or smaller screen where special care was taken during desolventizing (not toasted) to minimize denaturation of the protein to retain a high protein dispersibility index, for uses such as food extrusion of textured vegetable protein. It is the starting material for production of soy concentrate and soy protein isolate.

Soy flour is made by roasting the soybean, removing the coat, and grinding into a flour. Soy flour is manufactured with different fat levels.[129] Alternatively, raw soy flour omits the roasting step.

Soy lecithin can be added (up to 15%) to soy flour to make lecithinated soy flour. It increases dispersibility and gives it emulsifying properties.[129]

Soy flour has 50% protein and 5% fiber. It has higher levels of protein, thiamine, riboflavin, phosphorus, calcium, and iron than wheat flour. It does not contain gluten.[129] As a result, yeast-raised breads made with soy flour are dense in texture. Among many uses, soy flour thickens sauces, prevents staling in baked food, and reduces oil absorption during frying. Baking food with soy flour gives it tenderness, moistness, a rich color, and a fine texture.[129]

Soy grits are similar to soy flour except the soybeans have been toasted and cracked into coarse pieces.

Kinako is a soy flour used in Japanese cuisine.

Soy-based infant formula (SBIF) is sometimes given to infants who are not being strictly breastfed; it can be useful for infants who are either allergic to pasteurized cow milk proteins or who are being fed a vegan diet. It is sold in powdered, ready-to-feed, and concentrated liquid forms.

Some reviews have expressed the opinion that more research is needed to determine what effect the phytoestrogens in soybeans may have on infants.[136] Diverse studies have concluded there are no adverse effects in human growth, development, or reproduction as a result of the consumption of soy-based infant formula.[137][138][139] One of these studies, published in the Journal of Nutrition,[139] concludes that there are:

… no clinical concerns with respect to nutritional adequacy, sexual development, neurobehavioral development, immune development, or thyroid disease. SBIFs provide complete nutrition that adequately supports normal infant growth and development. FDA has accepted SBIFs as safe for use as the sole source of nutrition.

Soybeans can be processed to produce a texture and appearance similar to many other foods. For example, soybeans are the primary ingredient in many dairy product substitutes (e.g., soy milk, margarine, soy ice cream, soy yogurt, soy cheese, and soy cream cheese) and meat alternatives (e.g. veggie burgers). These substitutes are readily available in most supermarkets. Soy milk does not naturally contain significant amounts of digestible calcium. Many manufacturers of soy milk sell calcium-enriched products, as well. Soy is also used in tempeh: the beans (sometimes mixed with grain) are fermented into a solid cake.

Soy products also are used as a low-cost substitute in meat and poultry products.[140][141] Food service, retail and institutional (primarily school lunch and correctional) facilities regularly use such “extended” products. Extension may result in diminished flavor, but fat and cholesterol are reduced. Vitamin and mineral fortification can be used to make soy products nutritionally equivalent to animal protein; the protein quality is already roughly equivalent. The soy-based meat substitute textured vegetable protein has been used for more than 50 years as a way of inexpensively extending ground beef without reducing its nutritional value.[26][4][142][143]

The soybean is used to make a product called soy nut butter which is similar in texture to peanut butter.[144]

Sweet boiled beans are popular in Japan and Korea and the sweet boiled soybeans are called as “Daizu no Nimame (ja)” in Japan and Kongjorim (Korean: 콩조림) in Korea. Sweet boiled beans are even used in sweetened buns, especially in Mame Pan (ja).

The boiled and pasted edamame, called Zunda (ja), is used as one of the Sweet bean pastes in Japanese confections.

Roasted and ground soybeans can be used as a caffeine-free substitute for coffee. After the soybeans are roasted and ground, they look similar to regular coffee beans or can be used as a powder similar to instant coffee, with aroma and flavor of roasted soybeans.[145]

Soybeans with black hulls are used in Chinese fermented black beans, douchi, not to be confused with black turtle beans.

Soybeans are also used in industrial products, including oils, soap, cosmetics, resins, plastics, inks, crayons, solvents, and clothing. Soybean oil is the primary source of biodiesel in the United States, accounting for 80% of domestic biodiesel production.[146] Soybeans have also been used since 2001 as fermenting stock in the manufacture of a brand of vodka.[147] In 1936, Ford Motor Company developed a method where soybeans and fibers were rolled together producing a soup which was then pressed into various parts for their cars, from the distributor cap to knobs on the dash board. Ford also informed in public relation releases that in 1935 over five million acres (20,000 km2) was dedicated to growing soybeans in the United States.[148]

According to the American Cancer Society, “Studies in humans have not shown harm from eating soy foods. Moderate consumption of soy foods appears safe for both breast cancer survivors and the general population, and may even lower breast cancer risk.” There is insufficient research to indicate whether taking soy dietary supplements has any effect on health or cancer risk.[149]

Saponins, a class of natural surfactants (soaps), are sterols that are present naturally in a wide variety of plant foods, including vegetables, legumes, and cereals such as oats.[150] Whole soybeans contain from 0.17 to 6.16% saponins, 0.35 to 2.3% in defatted soy flour and 0.06 to 1.9% in tofu. Legumes such as soybean and chickpeas are the major source of saponins in the human diet. Sources of non-dietary saponins include alfalfa, sunflower, herbs and barbasco.

Soy contains isoflavones like genistein and daidzein,[151] and glycitein, an O-methylated isoflavone which accounts for 5–10% of the total isoflavones in soy food products. Glycitein is a phytoestrogen with weak estrogenic activity, comparable to that of the other soy isoflavones.[152]

Soy’s content of isoflavones are as much as 3 mg/g dry weight. Isoflavones are polyphenol compounds,[151] produced primarily by beans and other legumes, including peanuts and chickpeas. Isoflavones are closely related to flavonoids found in other plants, vegetables and flowers.[151]

Soybeans contain the isoflavones, genistein and daidzein, which are phytoestrogen compounds[151] implicated as potentially beneficial factors in cardiovascular diseases[153] and numerous other conditions.[151] No beneficial effects, however, have been shown in clinical research to lower the risk of cardiovascular diseases, including high blood cholesterol levels,[153][154] prostate cancer or respiratory infections.[155]

The dramatic increase in soyfood sales is largely credited to the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) approval of soy as a cholesterol-lowering food, along with other heart and health benefits.[22]

A 1995 review[156] concluded that soy protein is correlated with significant decreases in serum cholesterol, LDL (bad cholesterol) and triglycerides. However, HDL (good cholesterol) did not increase by a significant amount.[157] Soy phytoestrogens (isoflavones: genistein and daidzein) adsorbed onto the soy protein were suggested as the agent reducing serum cholesterol levels.

The FDA granted the following health claim for soy: “25 grams of soy protein a day, as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, may reduce the risk of heart disease.”[22] One serving, (1 cup or 240 mL) of soy milk, for instance, contains 6 or 7 grams of soy protein. Solae resubmitted their original petition, asking for a more vague health claim, after their original was challenged and highly criticized. Solae also submitted a petition for a health claim that soy can help prevent cancer. They quickly withdrew the petition for lack of evidence and after more than 1,000 letters of protest were received. On 18 February 2008, Weston A. Price Foundation submitted a petition for removal of this health claim.[158] 25 g/day soy protein was established as the threshold intake because most trials used at least this much protein and not because less than this amount is inefficacious. In fact, there is evidence suggesting that lower amounts are indeed efficacious.[159]

An American Heart Association (AHA) review of a decade long study of soy protein benefits casts doubt on the FDA allowed “Heart Healthy” claim for soy protein and does not recommend isoflavone supplementation. The review panel also found that soy isoflavones have not been shown to reduce post-menopausal “hot flashes” and the efficacy and safety of isoflavones to help prevent cancers of the breast, uterus or prostate is in question. However, AHA concludes that “many soy products should be beneficial to cardiovascular and overall health because of their high content of polyunsaturated fats, fiber, vitamins, and minerals and low content of saturated fat”.[153]

The AHA did not conduct a formal statistical analysis of the 22 studies upon which they based their estimate of the potency of soy protein. When such an analysis was conducted, Jenkins et al.[160] found that the AHA had considerably underestimated the hypocholesterolemic effects of soy protein. Further, when the analysis was limited to the 11 studies that provided evidence that the control and soy diets were matched, soy protein was found to lower LDL by 5.2 percent. This estimate is in line with the results of other recently published meta-analyses.[161][162][163] Furthermore, recent research suggests that soy protein decreases postprandial triglyceride levels, which is increasingly viewed as important for reducing coronary heart disease risk.[164]

Soybeans contain a high level of phytic acid, which has many effects including acting as an antioxidant and a chelating agent. The beneficial claims for phytic acid include reducing cancer,[165] minimizing diabetes,[166] and reducing inflammation.[167] However, phytic acid is also criticized for reducing vital minerals absorption due to its chelating effect, especially for diets already low in minerals.[168]

Allergy to soy is common, and the food is listed with other foods that commonly cause allergy, such as milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish. The problem has been reported among younger children, and the diagnosis of soy allergy is often based on symptoms reported by parents and results of skin tests or blood tests for allergy. Only a few reported studies have attempted to confirm allergy to soy by direct challenge with the food under controlled conditions.[169] It is very difficult to give a reliable estimate of the true prevalence of soy allergy in the general population. To the extent that it does exist, soy allergy may cause cases of urticaria and angioedema, usually within minutes to hours of ingestion. In rare cases, true anaphylaxis may also occur. The reason for the discrepancy is likely that soy proteins, the causative factor in allergy, are far less potent at triggering allergy symptoms than the proteins of peanut and shellfish.[170] An allergy test that is positive demonstrates that the immune system has formed IgE antibodies to soy proteins. However, this is only a factor when soy proteins reach the blood without being digested, in sufficient quantities to reach a threshold to provoke actual symptoms.

Soy can also trigger symptoms via food intolerance, a situation where no allergic mechanism can be proven. One scenario is seen in very young infants who have vomiting and diarrhoea when fed soy-based formula, which resolves when the formula is withdrawn. Older infants can suffer a more severe disorder with vomiting, diarrhoea that may be bloody, anemia, weight loss and failure to thrive. The most common cause of this unusual disorder is a sensitivity to cow’s milk, but soy formulas can also be the trigger. The precise mechanism is unclear and it could be immunologic, although not through the IgE-type antibodies that have the leading role in urticaria and anaphylaxis. However, it is also self-limiting and will often disappear in the toddler years.[171]

Soybeans contain isoflavones called genistein and daidzein, which are one source of phytoestrogens in the human diet. Because most naturally occurring phytoestrogens act as selective estrogen receptor modulators, or SERMs, which do not necessarily act as direct agonists of estrogen receptors, normal consumption of foods that contain these phytoestrogens should not provide sufficient amounts to elicit a physiological response in humans.[172][173]

Plant lignans associated with high fiber foods such as cereal brans and beans are the principal precursor to mammalian lignans which have an ability to bind to human estrogen sites. Soybeans are a significant source of mammalian lignan precursor secoisolariciresinol containing 13–273 µg/100 g dry weight.[174] Another phytoestrogen in the human diet with estrogen activity is coumestans, which are found in beans, split-peas, with the best sources being alfalfa, clover, and soybean sprouts. Coumestrol, an isoflavone coumarin derivative, is the only coumestan in foods.[175][176]

Soybeans and processed soy foods are among the richest foods in total phytoestrogens (wet basis per 100 g), which are present primarily in the form of the isoflavones daidzein and genistein.[177] Human breast milk-containing or cow milk formula-containing diets provide 0.005-0.01 mg of isoflavone per day, while soy-based infant formulas provide 6–47 mg of isoflavone daily. This intake is several orders of magnitude greater than those provided by other nutrients.[178]

Although considerable research has examined the potential for soy consumption to lower the risk of breast cancer in women, assessment of these studies indicates there is insufficient population evidence to make a conclusion about this relationship as of 2016.[151]

A 2001 literature review suggested that women with current or past breast cancer should be aware of the risks of potential tumor growth when taking soy products, based on the effect of phytoestrogens to promote breast cancer cell growth in animals.[179] A 2006 commentary reviewed the relationship with soy and breast cancer, stating that soy may decrease the risk of breast cancer, but cautioned that the impact of isoflavones on breast tissue needs to be evaluated at the cellular level in women at high risk for breast cancer.[180]

A high consumption of omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are found in most types of vegetable oil including soybean oil, may increase the likelihood that postmenopausal women will develop breast cancer.[181] Another analysis suggests an inverse association between total polyunsaturated fatty acid intake and breast cancer risk.[182]

A 2011 analysis of the literature said: “Our study suggests soy isoflavones intake is associated with a significant reduced risk of breast cancer incidence in Asian populations, but not in Western populations.”[183]

Because of the phytoestrogen content, some studies have suggested that soybean ingestion may influence testosterone levels in men. However, a 2010 meta-analysis of 15 placebo controlled studies showed that neither soy foods nor isoflavone supplements alter measures of bioavailable testosterone or estrogen concentrations in men.[184] It has been hypothesized that soy foods and enterolactone may increase the development of prostate cancer although no significant associations were observed for the soy isoflavones.[185] Furthermore, soy consumption has been shown to have no effect on the levels and quality of sperm.[186] A 2009 meta-analysis of the research on the association between soy consumption and prostate cancer risk in men concluded that “consumption of soy foods is associated with a reduction in prostate cancer risk in men.”[187]

Because of mixed results from animal studies and epidemiological studies, a (relatively definitive but expensive) controlled study of the impacts of soy on cognitive skills was performed; it found no impact.

Though there is some evidence that estrogen can help protect and repair the brain after injury in rats,[188] there is also evidence that phytoestrogens may be harmful for the recovery of rats in other situations[189] that have sustained brain injury.

Similarly, epidemiological evidence of humans eating soya products is currently divided: a study of Japanese men between 1965 and 1999 demonstrated a positive correlation between brain atrophy and consumption of tofu meals.[190]

A 2001 literature review noted that disturbing data on soy’s effect on the cognitive function of the elderly existed.[191] In 2008, an epidemiological study of 719 Indonesian elderly individuals found that tofu intake was associated with worse memory, but tempeh (a fermented soy product) intake was associated with better memory.[192]

The cover article in the Center for Science in the Public Interest’s September 2014 newsletter reported that a controlled study at USC prompted by suggestive epidemiological evidence found no impact on cognitive skills of years of soy vs milk protein diet enrichment.[193]

Though raw soy flour is known to be correlated with pancreatic cancer in rats[194] the cooked flour has not been found carcinogenic.[195][196] Whether soy might promote pancreatic cancer in humans is unknown because studies have not yet attempted to single out soy intake and the incidence of pancreatic cancer in humans, and the amount of soy fed to the rats is proportionately far larger than what humans would normally consume. However, the soy isoflavone genistein has been suggested as a chemopreventive agent against pancreatic cancer, by interfering with the chemical pathways that promote the creation and growth of tumors.[197]

The Cancer Council of New South Wales, Australia has released a statement saying scientific research suggests that overall the moderate consumption of soy products does not appear to present a risk to women with breast cancer, and there is equivocal evidence that consuming large amounts of soy products may have a protective effect against developing breast and prostate cancer. However, the Council does not recommend taking soy dietary supplements as there is no evidence they are either effective or safe at preventing or treating cancers.

One review noted that soy based foods may inhibit absorption of thyroid hormone medications required for treatment of hypothyroidism.[198] A 2015 scientific review by the European Food Safety Authority concluded that intake of isoflavones from supplements did not affect thyroid hormone levels in postmenopausal women.[199]

Soybeans and soy products contain significant amounts of purines, a class of organic compounds. For people who suffer from gout, eating foods containing moderate or high levels of purines may make the condition worse. The U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) recommends that gout sufferers limit consumption of soy products (although also suggesting that soy may have health benefits by reducing the risk for heart disease).[200] However, other researchers have found little or no association between consumption of purine-rich vegetables (including beans) and gout.[201][202]

Soybean futures are traded on the Chicago Board of Trade and have delivery dates in January (F), March (H), May (K), July (N), August (Q), September (U), November (X).

They are also traded on other commodity futures exchanges under different contract specifications:

قند مصنوعی با قند طبیعی خیلی متفاوت است و قندی که در میوه ها و سبزیجات وجود دارد برای بدن ضرر ندارد

استفاده از نارنگی در هنگام سرماخوردگی علاوه بر تامین آب مورد نیاز بدن برای درمان بیماری نیز بسیار مفید است

خاصيت سوياي لوبيا

با مصرف روزانه میوه ها و سبزیجات سیستم گوارشی خود را سالم نگه داشته و از مشکلات گوارشی در امان بمانید

از مهمترین خواص عدس می توان به رفع کم خونی و دارا بودن فسفر بالا اشاره کرد که برای کودکان به ویژه در دوران مدرسه مفید است

برای دادن بادام زمینی به کودک تان خیلی احتیاط کنید و بعد از مصرف مراقب رفتار و احوالش باشید

گردن مرغ مانند بال مرغ که خیلی طرفدار دارد مورد علاقه خیلی افراد است ولی آنها نمی دانند که مصرف گردن مرغ چه خطراتی در پی دارد

استفاده از برخی از مواد غذایی می تواند استرس و اضطراب را افزایش داده و فرد را مضطرب تر کند

اگر می خواهید چربی های انباشته شده در اطراف شکم تان را آب کنید استفاده از این معجون را فراموش نکنید

این تصور که خرما برای همه افراد خاصیت دارد و منع مصرف ندارد کاملا اشتباه است و کسانی هستند که نباید خرما مصرف کنند.

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