Do frozen Lima Beans contain Cyanide?

Do frozen Lima Beans contain Cyanide? - Flat Lay Photography of Three Tray of Foods

I often buy frozen vegetables, defrost and eat them.

Recently, I came across an article that says Lima Beans contain Cyanide, should be thoroughly cooked and then eaten.

Do frozen Lima Beans come precooked or are they supposed to be cooked before consuming them?


Location: Canada
If you need product information, please do let me know.



Best Answer

Raw lima beans do contain a compound, a cyanogenic glycoside, which would release cyanide if ingested raw.

(1) http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp8-c1.pdf

(2) http://www.foodsafety.govt.nz/elibrary/industry/Cyanogenic_Glycosides-Toxin_Which.pdf

(3) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24863488

(4) http://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.jfns.20140204.21.pdf

Frozen lima beans are typically uncooked. The usual stories about cooking many varieties of lima beans quote boiling for at least 15 minutes and discarding the cooking water.


Now trying to unwind the folklore....

(A) What is the toxicity of cyanide?

Cyanide in the body is an anion, which has a negative charge. In order to balance the charge a cation, a positive charged ion must be present too. Since beans would be eaten let's look at the toxicity of sodium cyanide.

The dose of sodium cyanide which would kill 50% of the subjects (LD-50) is about 15 mg/kg of body weight for mammals. But by weight sodium cyanide is 47% sodium and 53% cyanide. So the lethal dose for cyanide itself would be about 7mg/kg.

So a 154 pound person weighs 70 kg (2.2 lbs per kg). 70*7 is approximately 500 mg or 0.5 grams.

(B) Does the cyanide content of lima beans vary?

Yes. Supposedly the varieties of lima beans consumed in the US (and presumably Canada) are specifically chosen to be low in cyanide.

Cyanide in "lima beans [varies] between 15 and 500 mg HCN/kg fresh weight (Bickerstaff, 2003)" quoted from:

(5) http://members.ecetoc.org/Documents/Document/JACC%20053%20Vol%20I.pdf

But I can find the original source by Bickerstaff in the article.

(C) How much does cooking reduce the cyanide?

There is a paper which notes that in other foods the cyanogenic glycosides are 100% destroyed by cooking.

(6) http://www.onlineresearchjournals.org/JBFSR/pdf/2013/jan/Onyeike%20et%20al..pdf

(D) How does the bean produce cyanide?

The cyanide in lima beans is present as "pure" cyanide, but a cyanide compound called a cyanogenic glycoside. Lima beans contain two such compounds, linamarin and lotaustralin

Linamarin

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Lotaustralin

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I'll quote Dr. G. Speijers of the National Institute of Public Health and Environmental Protection, Laboratory for Toxicology, Bilthoven, The Netherlands

(7) http://www.inchem.org/documents/jecfa/jecmono/v30je18.htm

The first aspect is the processing of plant products containing cyanogenic glycosides. When the edible parts of the plants are macerated, the catabolic intracellular enzyme ß-glucosidase can be released, coming into contact with the glycosides. This enzyme hydrolyzes the cyanogenic glycosides to produce hydrogen cyanide and glucose and ketones or benzaldehyde.

It seems that the human gut also has bacteria which are capable of hydrolyzing the cyanogenic glycosides to produce hydrogen cyanide.




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Quick Answer about "Do frozen Lima Beans contain Cyanide?"

The cyanide content in US lima beans is usually 100-170 mg/kg.

Do frozen lima beans have cyanide?

"Lima beans in the U.S. tend to have lower levels of cyanide." Though commercially grown lima beans in the U.S. must have less than 200 mg/kg of cyanide, it's definitely better to err on the safe side and cook your beans thoroughly, since ingesting even small amounts of cyanide could cause unpleasant side effects such ...

Are frozen lima beans safe?

LIMA BEANS - COMMERCIALLY FROZEN The precise answer to that question depends to a large extent on storage conditions - keep lima beans frozen at all times. Properly stored, frozen lima beans will maintain best quality for about 12 months in the freezer, although they will usually remain safe to eat after that.

Are frozen baby lima beans good for you?

Beans are packed with protein, fiber, and other nutrients, making them a superfood. Lima beans are an especially good source of iron.

Do frozen lima beans need to be cooked?

Lima beans are sold dried, frozen, canned, or fresh, and they must always be cooked before eating.



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More answers regarding do frozen Lima Beans contain Cyanide?

Answer 2

Lima beans contains Cyanide in small quantity [1].

I am not certain, nor do I want to make an uneducated guess as what quantity per/day/year one needs to eat in order to be sick (fatally or not)

They need to be cooked to let the cyanide evaporate as a gas; so cook'em up.

[...]Cooking the beans uncovered allows the poison to escape as a gas. To be perfectly safe, drain the cooking water.[...]

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=11861532

[1] http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp8-c1.pdf

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