Sarah Webb

Skip to content

Navigation

  • Home
  • About Sarah
  • Projects
  • Clips
  • Editing
  • Contact
August 21, 2009 By Sarah Webb

Pop goes the antioxidants

fresh popped kernels courtesy of my kitchen
popped kernels fresh from my kitchen

Summer’s distracted me from blogging, but I just returned from the American Chemical Society meeting in Washington, DC. That meeting is a huge mishmash for me– a combination of catching up with former chemistry colleagues, meeting up with current writing colleagues, and getting myself back up to speed on what’s new with molecules.

Though it’s a small story in the broader sense of the ACS meeting, as a popcorn fan, I can’t help but be excited that my favorite salty snack– popcorn– also packs the highest per-gram punch of polyphenols, a class of antioxidants. Before anyone goes crazy, no, we shouldn’t all switch to a popcorn diet, particularly one that’s covered in butter, real or artificial.

Fortunately, I’m an old-fashioned gal when it comes to my kernels. I like them popped fresh in a little oil on a stove, just like Mom made before we had a microwave. Some of my most vivid memories of childhood road trips include riding down either I-95 or I-10 and the tug-of-war with my sister over who got to hold the large Charles’ Chips tin containing fluffy, crunchy saltiness that Mom had popped before we left home.

popcorn on the stove, just like Mom used to make
popcorn on the stove, just like Mom used to make

Back to the science, though– the popcorn was part of a larger study by Joe Vinson and his colleagues at the University of Scranton looking at antioxidants in whole grains. Like other plant-derived foods, whole grains have antioxidants and those chemicals could be part of the reason that these foods are healthy. Not a particularly new idea, I’ll admit. But as I’m crunching on a fresh pot of snack food, I don’t mind feeling just a little less guilty.

Share
Permalink food health science American Chemical Society antioxidants butter chemistry microwave popcorn whole grains

Sidebar

  • Recent Posts
  • Popular Posts
  • Recent Comments
  • Tags
  • Inside Griffith Observatory
    Standard
    Inside Griffith Observatory
    August 30, 2016
  • At home among the natives
    Gallery
    At home among the natives
    September 1, 2015
  • View from "The Last Frontier"
    Standard
    View from “The Last Frontier”
    August 28, 2015
  • brian
    Here's a really great recording of some racketts. https://youtu.be/HGI4zG-Zddw
  • Mai invitare un chimico in pizzeria. | il blog della SCI
    [...] http://sarahannewebb.webbofscience.com/2009/01/29/pizza-chemistry/ [...]
  • Sarah Webb
    Thanks, Matt. Though I have to note that I have a "shady" past when it comes to SEC sports (I'm…
  • academia AMNH Blogging 'Bout Boys blue whale cancer carbon dioxide Cassini cat Chattanooga chemistry Christopher Clark climate change DNA education experiment FDA fish flexibility gorilla H1N1 influenza Jennifer Fink journalism Mars May blogathon Mother's day music NASA Nature New York City Nobel Prize NY harbor Opportunity physics problem solving protein rat rovers science writing Spirit swine flu virus water whales women in science
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Sarah Webb. Powered by WordPress and Ravel.