NO
no. i took cooking class last semester at my school and i learned that the best way to get nutrients from veggies is to eat them fresh. frozen comes second, then dried and then in a can. it's better to get your servings than none at all. but i'd pick the fresh.
there are lower levels of vitamin c in dried fruit than in fresh fruit and dried fruits do not have glucose
Fresh parsley is much better - it will add far more flavour. Dried parsley will not work nearly as well.
yes, they can eat fresh leaves and strawberries
It's completely identical nutrition-wise, assuming the dried fruit you're eating is simply dried fruit. Sometimes, dried fruit will be sold with added sugar, corn syrup or oil (this will be shown on the label)- which makes it less nutritiously dense. Also, dried fruit is (by volume) much higher in calories.
They are both the same healthiness, unless the fresh have been on a supermarket shelf for a long time. In this case, the frozen may have kept it's nutrients better than the fresh. Bear in mind that frozen strawberries become unusable mushy if you defrost them - they're better off eaten frozen or cooked from frozen.
Different sized bags will contain different weights - and some dried fruit will be heavier than other dried fruit. One thing you can be certain about is that a bag of dried fruit will weight less than a bag of the comparable amount of fresh fruit prior to drying.
because fresh food means it is taking in water and dried food isn't but i would still perfure fresh food
juicy fruit is better only if you like sweet things but if you like minty things than you mght think that winter fresh is better because there is acually no wrong awnser
Luminol works better on dried blood than on fresh blood because the chemical reaction that produces luminescence is more effective when the hemoglobin in dried blood has already broken down. Fresh blood contains moisture and other components that can inhibit the reaction. Additionally, the presence of enzymes and other substances in fresh blood can interfere with luminol's ability to detect the iron in hemoglobin. Thus, the stable, concentrated nature of dried blood enhances luminol's effectiveness.
true
A dried fruit will weight less than one that isn't dried (both of the same size and shape).