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7 most common kitchen mistakes that destroy food nutrients

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 25, 2025, 12:42 IST
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1/8

7 most common kitchen mistakes that destroy food nutrients

We chop, boil, fry, and store our food with the best intentions to make it tasty, safe, and satisfying. But somewhere between the cutting board and the plate, a good share of nutrients quietly vanish. Vitamins fade, minerals leach out, and healthy ingredients lose their edge. The good news? A few small kitchen tweaks can help you keep the goodness intact without changing the way you cook. Scroll down to see what’s silently stealing your food’s nutrition and how to fix it...

2/8

Overcooking everything

That long simmer might make sabzi melt in your mouth, but it also drains vitamins like C and B, which can’t handle heat for too long. Overboiling spinach or slow-cooking beans for hours breaks down not just nutrients but also their colour and flavour. The fix? Cook just until tender. A little bite left in your vegetables means a lot more nutrition left inside them.

3/8

Throwing away the cooking water

When you boil vegetables, a big portion of their nutrients leach into the water. Pouring that water down the drain is like emptying out the good stuff. Instead, reuse it, add it to soups, dals, or gravies. The same goes for rice, instead of draining the water after boiling, try steaming or using the absorption method so the nutrients stay in your pot, not your sink.

4/8

Cutting veggies too early

Chopping vegetables long before cooking seems convenient, but once they’re cut, air and light start breaking down delicate vitamins. Especially in foods rich in vitamin C (like tomatoes, coriander, and capsicum), early chopping can mean major losses. Always chop right before you cook - and if you must prep ahead, store cut vegetables in airtight containers in the fridge, not on the counter.

5/8

Peeling away the nutrition

Most of a vegetable’s nutrients often sit just beneath the skin - in carrots, cucumbers, apples, and even potatoes. Peeling them off strips away fibre and antioxidants in one go. Wash thoroughly and keep the skin wherever possible. A scrub brush does more good than a peeler ever will.

6/8

Frying at very high heat

We love the sizzle of tadka and the crispness of fried food, but excessive heat can destroy heat-sensitive nutrients and even form harmful compounds. Oils that smoke easily break down faster, especially when reused. Choose stable oils like groundnut, rice bran, or ghee for high-heat cooking, and avoid pushing the temperature until the oil starts to smoke. For shallow frying or sautéing, medium heat is enough - flavour stays, nutrients survive.

7/8

Storing leftovers the wrong way

Leaving cooked food uncovered on the counter for too long not only invites bacteria but also leads to nutrient loss, especially if reheated repeatedly. Cool food quickly and store it in airtight glass or steel containers. When reheating, warm only what you’ll eat - and do it gently. Microwaving with a lid or steaming lightly works better than reheating on high flame.

8/8

Ignoring iron and clay cookware

Sometimes the right vessel makes all the difference. Cooking in cast iron pans naturally boosts iron in your food - especially in acidic dishes like tomato sabzi or rasam. Clay pots, on the other hand, cook slowly and evenly, preserving moisture and nutrients. They also let you use less oil, which means lighter, healthier meals without losing flavour.

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