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Saturated Fats Vindicated?

by: euclidarms

Wed Jan 27, 2010 at 04:11:41 AM PST


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By Ed Bruske
aka The Slow Cook

We don't harbor any prejudices against fat at The Slow Cook. In fact, we respect fat as an essential macro-nutrient, along with protein. On a low-carb, high-fat and protein diet, I've lost a ton of weight and improved my health dramatically by every standard measure. What's important is not how much fat you eat, but what kind of fat.

We try to avoid polyunsaturated, omega-6 fats such as soybean, cottonseed and corn oil. These fats, although ubiquitous in the modern food chain, especially in prepared and processed foods, until very recently were entirely unknown to the human diet. We try to incorporate more healthy, mono-unsaturated fats in our diet, such as those from olive oil and nuts. (But pork fat is also 60 percent mono-unsaturated.) We also try to eat more omega-3 fats from oily fish (wild-caught Alaskan salmon, sardines) as well as grass-fed meats, dairy and eggs.

Knowing which fats are best and where to find them takes education, and that you have to do on your own. To learn about which fats to eat and which to avoid, do your homework.

But even people who know a thing or two about fats are leery of saturated fat. Doesn't that cause heart disease? In fact, the human body is perfectly equipped to handle saturated fats. Enzymes de-saturate them and turn them into more readily usable components.

Even among saturated fats,  however, there are different kinds and much to consider. Most common are saturated fats from animals such as beef and pork. Avoid beef raised on corn in confined animal feedlot operations, or CAFOs. Find a good source of grass-fed meats and stick with that. Coconut oil, which is almost entirely saturated fat, is actually quite healthful. It is composed of rare, medium-chain fatty acids that the body quickly metabolizes for energy. It is 50 percent lauric acid, a proven antimicrobial that boosts the immune system. Not surprisingly, mother's milk is also high in lauric acid. Ain't nature grand?

Now comes Michael Eades, the medical doctor and author of low-carb diet books, trumpeting a new meta-study concluding that there is no link between saturated fat and heart disease. Eades does not care for meta-studies much. These are not actual studies, just analyses of studies previously conducted. But this meta-study was conducted by a well-respected researcher, and published in a well-respected journal. Further proof, I say, that you just can't believe everything you hear from the anti-fat propagandists. This issue really does require careful study, rather than simply following the politically-correct edicts of the herd.

euclidarms :: Saturated Fats Vindicated?
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Link? (4.00 / 1)
You'll publish a link, right?

This is very interesting. For years, the knock was very simple, saturated fats = bad. Obviously, however, people ate saturated fats for a long time before the proliferation of plaques that showed up in autopsies beginning in the first half of the twentieth century. Curious people didn't begin doing epidemiological studies until well after the introduction and proliferation of hydrogenated oils, which exploded during and after WWII. At that point, there was no such thing as a study that didn't include trans-fat as just another saturated fat.

More recently, analysts have tried to separate the influence of trans-fats from other saturated fats. I always wondered if they were getting it right.

Does your reference address the question of trans-fats vs. other saturated fats?


Excellent questions, count (4.00 / 1)
I hope we'll get an answer, or a link.

I can say that I was reading some cooking blogs a year or three ago, about cooking with coconut oil (used in certain Asian cuisines), and the consensus seemed to be that fears of coconut oil were vastly overblown.  Me, I've always gone for real butter (for example) b/c I've always trusted cows more than the chemical companies that produce margarine.  And while I use corn oil for frying, I'd prefer peanut oil, if anybody sold it around here.

Our ancestors did not eat margarine.

If the guys at the farmers' market who sell free-range meat (beef, mostly, but also some pork & lamb) would sell unsalted butter, I'd buy it from them: One pound of butter lasts long enough (in the freezer, just defrosting a bit at a time) that they could triple the price and it would still be affordable for me: on average, a pound lasts me about 3 months.

Oh, and the diarist's claims about fatty fish are, afaik, correct:  Wild-caught salmon, mackerel, bluefish, sardines:  the really oily fish tend to be very high in Omega-3 fatty acids.  

The most remarkable thing about my mother is that for thirty years she served the family nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found. -- Calvin Trillin


[ Parent ]
Do you have any memory (4.00 / 1)
of what the Bush admin did about trans fats? Did Tommy Thompson merely issue an advisory against it? Was any legislation passed mandating a phase-out?

Some phase-outs have occurred, but I think the progress has been too small and too slow.


[ Parent ]
Don't remember... (4.00 / 1)
but I'm pretty sure the Bush administration was all in favor of trans-fats.  Anything that would improve the profits of Big Bidness (as Molly Ivins used to say) was OK with them.

I hope the entire Bush family drops dead.  Preferably of heart attacks.  But that will never happen b/c they already have platinum health insurance.

OTOH, it is not impossible that Barbara Bush will lose her "beautiful mind" to Alzheimer's...

Karma has a nasty way of dealing with the ugly.

The most remarkable thing about my mother is that for thirty years she served the family nothing but leftovers. The original meal has never been found. -- Calvin Trillin


[ Parent ]
Bush and trans (4.00 / 1)
I've done a little looking. There was no phase-out legislation. FDA adopted labeling regulations. 1999 proposals were withdrawn in 2003, and new marketing regs were issued in 2008 that gave maximum leeway to Trans Free claims. Conversion is voluntary.

[ Parent ]
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