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Worried that unsoaked beans will cause digestive trouble? Worry not

Not soaking beans won't affect your body.
Not soaking beans won’t affect your body.
(Glenn Koenig / Los Angeles Times)
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Before someone brings up the whole digestibility issue, the benefits of soaking beans to relieve any unpleasantness have pretty much been disproved.

Most of the gastric distress (my, we’re finding a lot of euphemisms, aren’t we?) that comes from eating beans comes from indigestible sugars they contain called alpha-galactosides that our body doesn’t produce enzymes to break down. They pass through the stomach undigested until they reach the large intestine. There they ferment, producing gases. The rest is faux pas.

According to a bean scientist I talked to, cold-soaking beans does nothing to remove those sugars and even hot-soaking (the so-called “quick-soak” method) doesn’t reduce them by enough to make a difference. You’d have to hot-soak repeatedly to get rid of an appreciable amount.

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Then, of course, there’s the whole fiber issue. Beans contain a lot of fiber and because our diets are notoriously low in it, that can come as a shock to our lower digestive tract and our loved ones.


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