Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 11 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2009 Oct;57(4):379-91. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2009.02.011. Epub 2009 Sep 3.
While cooking has long been argued to improve the diet, the nature of the improvement has not been well defined. As a result, the evolutionary significance of cooking has variously been proposed as being substantial or relatively trivial. In this paper, we evaluate the hypothesis that an important and consistent effect of cooking food is a rise in its net energy value. The pathways by which cooking influences net energy value differ for starch, protein, and lipid, and we therefore consider plant and animal foods separately. Evidence of compromised physiological performance among individuals on raw diets supports the hypothesis that cooked diets tend to provide energy. Mechanisms contributing to energy being gained from cooking include increased digestibility of starch and protein, reduced costs of digestion for cooked versus raw meat, and reduced energetic costs of detoxification and defence against pathogens. If cooking consistently improves the energetic value of foods through such mechanisms, its evolutionary impact depends partly on the relative energetic benefits of non-thermal processing methods used prior to cooking. We suggest that if non-thermal processing methods such as pounding were used by Lower Palaeolithic Homo, they likely provided an important increase in energy gain over unprocessed raw diets. However, cooking has critical effects not easily achievable by non-thermal processing, including the relatively complete gelatinisation of starch, efficient denaturing of proteins, and killing of food borne pathogens. This means that however sophisticated the non-thermal processing methods were, cooking would have conferred incremental energetic benefits. While much remains to be discovered, we conclude that the adoption of cooking would have led to an important rise in energy availability. For this reason, we predict that cooking had substantial evolutionary significance.
虽然烹饪长期以来被认为可以改善饮食,但改善的性质尚未得到很好的定义。因此,烹饪的进化意义被认为是重要的或相对微不足道的。在本文中,我们评估了这样一个假设,即烹饪食物的一个重要且一致的影响是提高其净能量值。烹饪影响净能量值的途径因淀粉、蛋白质和脂质而异,因此我们分别考虑植物性食物和动物性食物。在生食饮食的个体中出现生理机能受损的证据支持这样一种假设,即熟食饮食往往提供能量。从烹饪中获得能量的机制包括淀粉和蛋白质的消化率提高、熟肉相对于生肉的消化成本降低,以及解毒和抵御病原体的能量成本降低。如果烹饪通过这些机制一致地提高食物的能量价值,那么它的进化影响部分取决于烹饪前使用的非热加工方法的相对能量效益。我们认为,如果旧石器时代早期的人类使用非热加工方法,如捣实,那么它们可能会比未加工的生食提供重要的能量增益。然而,烹饪具有非热加工方法难以实现的关键影响,包括淀粉的相对完全胶凝、蛋白质的有效变性以及食源性病原体的杀灭。这意味着,无论非热加工方法多么复杂,烹饪都会带来额外的能量收益。虽然还有很多需要发现,但我们的结论是,烹饪的采用将导致能量供应的重要增加。因此,我们预测烹饪具有重要的进化意义。