“We’ve gotten to the point where this crop can be economical,” he said.
Like canola’s rapeseed ancestors, pennycress suffers from two problems: high levels of antinutritional erucic acid in the oil and high levels of glucosinalates, particularly one called sinigrin, in the meal. If you’ve experienced the sinus-clearing effects of a good horseradish sauce, you are familiar with sinigrin.
This limits pennycress’s value as animal feed. Raw glucosinalate-containing plants contain enzymes that break them down into toxic products in the body. While heating deactivates this enzyme, the glucosinalates can add an off taste to products such as milk, for example, if dairy cattle are fed rapeseed meal.
Click here to see more...