so whole broccoli is useless for suforaphane. broccoli spouts have some, but are also not a good reliable enough source? i know it was explained somewhere but i couldnt find it. how stable is suforaphane when you consume actual broccoli sprouts and how much do you need? apologies i know it was talked about, but i just cant find the precise answer when i looked for it. everything i saw after going back is how unstable sulforaphane is and it has to be in a supplement form for best absorption but im trying to quit supplements. so christine, tell me again if not a huge problem, how reliable are actual sprouts and how much would one need instead of using any supplement?
Let me clarify. Fresh broccoli sprouts will yield between 10-100 times more sulforaphane than broccoli vegetable. If the vegetable is cooked, the enzyme is destroyed and you get none, although there can be a small amount converted from the glucoraphanin (not destroyed by cooking) by your gut microflora - but that is uncertain in an individual as we may or may not have any myrosinase activity in the species in an individual's gut - and no way to measure this.
Fresh sprouts can vary because there is a 16-fold variation in seed bioactive content. In addition to that, there is the epithiospecifier protein (ESP) issue that significantly inhibits the myrosinase enzyme. So, if you want to grow sprouts, you need to eat a lot to try to mitigate against these possible losses. The clinical trials using fresh sprouts typically use 100 grams of sprouts daily - but the difference is that they use a known seed stock, so the SFN Yield is more predictable.
Sulforaphane is very unstable and we suggest that if you use the powdered version and mix it in water - or blend up the fresh sprouts, you really need to consume this within 10 minutes - but absolutely no more than 30 minutes.
So in answer to your last question, 100 grams of sprouts daily - but this leaves a question mark over the SFN Yield, so perhaps more to cover that. It all depends on if you are using this just for preventive health effects - or if you have a particular condition where you want to be sure you matching the clinical trial dose.
(Perhaps you could save this information for future reference?)