digitS' :
We do pay for the folks at the
the land-grant universities to inform us on issues of food safety for both humans and livestock. Our land-grant universities, along with the USDA, are charged with providing information on agriculture, home economics, and related subjects thru the cooperative extension services. We may as well pay some attention to what they have to say.
Oxalic acid will break down during cooking. However, oxalic acid is NOT the toxin in potato peels. Potatoes and other plants in the Solanum family contain solanum-type glycoalkaloids. One of these alkaloids is solanine.
"These alkaloids are not destroyed by cooking or drying at high temperatures."
"Humans and all classes of livestock are susceptible to poisoning by solunum-type glycoalkaloids."
"Luckily, glycoalkaloids are poorly absorbed by the gastrointestinal tract of mammals, an appreciable amount of solanum-type glycoalkaloids is hydrolized in the gut of mammals to the less toxic aglycones, these metabolites are rapidly excreted in the urine and feces of mammals. Because exposure to these poisons is generally by ingestion, it takes a relatively large amount of them to cause death."
Steve
That's interesting thanks! However, birds aren't mammals and don't have guts...they have gizzards. Would the above still apply do you think?