healthiest roasting sheets for veggies

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I like the sheet pans I got at Costco. They are double layer with an air pocket between so food doesn’t burn. I also like my pampered chef stone pans — I knew pampered chef ladies back in the 90s and all that stuff is still going strong, so it’s the one MlM party I would actually attend! Bummed no one does it anymore.

My grandmother had Alzheimer’s in the 70s and my mom went through an aluminum purge in the 80s after reading some articles linking them. My family, including some scientists, did a fairly deep dive and concluded its not linked to Alzheimer’s and it’s not a big deal assuming you are not cooking/storing everything in aluminum. For acidic stuff, better to use stainless steel.



Ummmmmm isn’t this exactly what people are saying……cooking on aluminum

To the other pp …. Agreed we do not want aluminum in our bodies

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28629908/

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I like the sheet pans I got at Costco. They are double layer with an air pocket between so food doesn’t burn. I also like my pampered chef stone pans — I knew pampered chef ladies back in the 90s and all that stuff is still going strong, so it’s the one MlM party I would actually attend! Bummed no one does it anymore.

My grandmother had Alzheimer’s in the 70s and my mom went through an aluminum purge in the 80s after reading some articles linking them. My family, including some scientists, did a fairly deep dive and concluded its not linked to Alzheimer’s and it’s not a big deal assuming you are not cooking/storing everything in aluminum. For acidic stuff, better to use stainless steel.



Ummmmmm isn’t this exactly what people are saying……cooking on aluminum

To the other pp …. Agreed we do not want aluminum in our bodies

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28629908/


Ah! A case-control (retrospective) self-report study with n=418, which concluded that aluminum "may" accumulate and "may" be a risk factor for cancer.

As you know, research is an ongoing discussion amongst the research communities. I'm sure you looked at the other studies noted in the PubMed results (at the bottom) which quoted this study and continued the conversation?

How about this prospective cohort study of 106,978 women that found "Heavy use of skincare products, i.e. creaming the body up to two times per day during mid-life, did not increase the risk of cancer of the breast or endometrium"?
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31796030/

I'm sure you understand the relative merits of retrospective and prospective studies, as well as how case-control compares to a prospective cohort analysis. Isn't the research conversation fascinating?
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