PROTEIN AND FAT IN FRUITS
The composition of fruits is a matter of considerable importance, for on it the food value of the
fruits depends. To a certain extent, the composition of all fruits is the same, but the varieties of this food
differ in their food values almost as greatly as do vegetables.
Many of them are extremely low in this respect, while a few of them are rather high. In order to determine
the place that fruit should have in a meal, it is necessary to obtain a definite idea of the composition as
well as the food value of the different varieties.
PROTEIN AND FAT IN FRUITS.--Such small quantities of protein and fat are contained in
fruits that very little attention need be given to these substances. Exceptions are found in avocados, or
alligator pears, and in ripe olives, both of which are high in fat.
Then, too, there is a small amount of protein in grapes and some other fruits, but it is not sufficient
to merit consideration.
CARBOHYDRATE IN FRUIT.--Whatever food value fruits may have, whether it be high or
low, is due to the carbohydrate they contain. Some green fruits and bananas contain a very small amount
of starch, but on the whole the carbohydrate of fruits is in the form of sugar and is in solution in the fruit
juices.
The chief form of this carbohydrate is known as levulose, or fruit sugar. However, glucose, another form
of sugar, is also found in nearly all fruits, grapes and dried fruits, such as figs, raisins, etc., containing an
unusually large amount.
In addition, cane sugar is contained in the majority of fruits. Pectin is also a carbohydrate that is found in
large quantities in some fruits, while in other fruits it is lacking.
This substance is related to the gums and to cellulose. Although it is one of the carbohydrates from which
no food value is derived, it is of considerable importance, because it is responsible for the jelly-making
properties of fruits.
In fruits that are not fully matured, or, in other words, green fruits, the sugar has not developed to
so great an extent as it has in perfectly ripe fruits. Consequently, such fruits are not so high in food value
as they are when they become ripe.
As is well known, it is the sugar of fruits that accounts for their sweet taste, for the sweeter the fruits,
the more sugar and the less acid they contain. The quantity of this substance varies from 1 per cent. in
lemons to 20 per cent. in some other fresh fruits, such as plums.
In dried fruits, the amount of sugar is much higher, reaching as high as 60 per cent. or even more in such
fruits as figs, dates, and raisins.
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