diminish the impact of undigested carbohydrates that reach the colon:
• Reduce the oligosaccharides in beans. Beans are among the most
notorious flatulence producers. The offending compounds are raffinose,
starchyose, and verbacose—oligosaccharides that can’t be broken down before
they reach the colon because humans don’t produce alpha-galactosidase, the
enzyme needed to break apart the bonds in the oligosaccharides found in beans.
They arrive in the colon relatively undigested and are fermented by bacteria in
the colon, resulting in intestinal gas. There are a number of ways to reduce
oligosaccharide intake from beans:
1. Use fresh beans instead of dried beans because their oligosaccharide content
is much lower.
2. Buy only as many dried beans as can be used within a few months. The
longer beans are stored, the higher their oligosaccharide content becomes.
3. Soak beans for about twelve hours or overnight; discard the soaking water
and rinse well before placing in fresh water and cooking. Plan ahead for a
double soak, during which this procedure is completed twice before
cooking. If there’s no time to soak, boil the beans briefly, let them sit in the
water for an hour or two, discard the soaking water, rinse well, and cook in fresh water. When boiling beans, remove any white foam that forms at the
surface; this foam contains oligosaccharides.
4. Sprout legumes. Sprouting converts oligosaccharides into sugars. 31Sprouted mung beans, lentils, and peas can be eaten raw. Other legumes should be
cooked after sprouting. Soak beans for twelve to twenty-four hours, drain,
and rinse well; then sprout for at least one to three days, or until small
sprouts appear. Be sure to rinse and drain two or three times a day. Once the
beans have a tiny sprout, they’re ready to cook; sprouting cuts cooking time
in half.
5. Start with small portions of beans and gradually increase the portion size.
This will allow time for more formation of bacterial flora that can
completely digest oligosaccharides.
6. Make sure beans are thoroughly cooked. Undercooked beans are more
difficult to digest. Beans are sufficiently cooked when they can easily be
crushed between the tongue and the roof of the mouth.
7. Rinse canned beans well before eating.
8. Select small legumes that are easier to digest. The least problematic are
skinless, split legumes, such as mung dahl (split mung beans), red lentils,
and split peas. Generally, smaller beans, such as adzuki and mung beans, are
easier to digest than large beans, such as lima or kidney beans.
9. Include fermented bean products, such as tempeh and miso, and lower-fiber
legume options, such as tofu.