Why are nitrates in cured meats considered bad for your health, when “healthy vegetables” contain just as much nitrates?

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Meats cured with nitrates (hot dogs, deli meats, ham, bacon, etc.) are widely considered to be “bad for your health” by most medical authorities.

However, leafy green vegetables, such as kale, spinach, broccoli, & cabbage, on average have similar, or even higher concentrations of nitrates in them. Leafy green vegetables, in contrast, are widely considered to be “good for your health” by the same medical authorities.

On average, hot dogs contains between 10 – 50 mg of nitrate per 100g, while 100g of kale contains 25 – 40 mg of nitrate.

Why is there such a concern about the nitrate concentrations in cured meats, when leafy green vegetables have similar concentrations of nitrates?

In: Biology

6 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

I mean, kale is 22g a cup. Hotdogs are 150 per and people often eat two or more. The gram by gram comparison only makes sense in a world people eat the two in equal amounts.

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