The Mustard Lesson: How I Finally Stopped Overcomplicating Healthy Eating
It started with a question I'd been asking for years: do cruciferous vegetables have to be eaten raw to be worth eating? I'd been adding more broccoli and cauliflower to my days because they're genuinely good for you — particularly for something called sulforaphane, a compound linked to meaningful health benefits. The problem is that cooking deactivates myrosinase, the enzyme that helps your body produce it. I'd read this, worried about it, and occasionally forced myself to eat raw broccoli I didn't enjoy. Then I learned that mustard contains its own myrosinase. A spoonful added after cooking can restore what the heat removed. That was the thing that quietly changed everything. Suddenly I wasn't trying to optimize. I was just making lunch. Frozen broccoli microwaved in the bag, a generous spoonful of mustard stirred in afterward, maybe some guacamole or flax oil alongside, beans or sardines for protein. That's it. And here's what I've come to apprec...