Good Fats
/Bad Fats
Fats are fantastic:
Not all fats are villains; in
fact, we need fat for good health.
As strange as it sounds, eating fat can actually help you lose weight.
Not only that, your memory and your immune system will benefit from eating fat.
It is an extremely bad idea to eliminate fat completely from your diet.
"Good" fats are absolutely essential. These good fats come from
things like Enova Oil, canola oil, extra virgin olive oil, flax seed, almonds,
walnuts and cold-water fish. Eating the right kind of fat and getting rid of
the wrong kind is what is needed.
There is the example: a study that involved 1,000 rats and how they lost
weight while actually eating more fat. The rats were fed a diet high in
saturated fats, the kind in milk, cheese and red meat. Part way through the
experiment, 500 of the rats had omega-3 fatty acids added to their diet. Not
substituted, but added. "All of the rats lost weight. Tumor growth ceased
or reversed and heart problems got better. "And they were eating double
the fat." This is why we need to recognize the value of fat and how
Americans have got it all wrong. Fat is fabulous!
Fat for health
We need fats not only to keep our arteries healthy but also for
prostaglandular activity. Prostaglandins are an important family of hormones
that help control things like fertility, inflammation, immunity and communication
between cells. That means, when you drastically cut fat out of your diet or eat
the wrong fats, your body suffers.
The best fats are omega-3 fats, the ones that come from olive oil,
cold-water fish, walnut oil, wheat germ oil and flax seed oil.
America took a wrong turn a few decades back, with popular diets
extolling the benefits of eating fewer fats. The problem was that while many of
the food products being hyped as healthy were lower in fat, they were made up
of the worst kind of fats for our bodies; trans fats.
What more recent research is showing, according Harvard School of Public
Health, is it isn’t low fat that is so important. Rather, it is the type of fat
in our diet that is the key to good health.
If omega-3 fats are the good guys, then trans fats are the villains.
Recently, the Food and Drug Administration has moved to have these trans
fats listed as part of nutrition labeling on foods.
The new labeling law still allows trans fats to be hidden so consumers
have to do a little detective work. The easiest way to tell if a product has
trans fat is to look for the words "hydrogenated oils" or
"partially hydrogenated oils" on the label. Heating liquid vegetable
oils in the presence of hydrogen produces hydrogenated oils. It makes fat more
stable, which helps in the preparation of processed foods, but it’s not
something our body particularly likes. Unfortunately, it is often an ingredient
in things Americans like to eat — crackers, cookies, potato chips, French
fries, stick margarine — and contributes to the heart disease and obesity that
is sweeping the country.
The lowdown
One of the things trans fats do is to raise something called low-density
lipoproteins or LDL. And even though the word "low" makes this sound
enticing, low-density lipoproteins are not good things when it comes to the
body. According to the Harvard School of Public Health, these low-density
lipoproteins carry cholesterol from the liver to the rest of the body.
When there is too much LDL in the blood, it can be deposited on the walls
of coronary arteries and lead to heart attacks. High-density lipoproteins are
good. They carry cholesterol from the blood back to the liver, which processes
it for elimination. You should know your levels of both HDL and LDL.
People look at cholesterol as a number, but really it is a ratio. If you
increase the amount of HDL, it carries away a lot of the bad LDLs. Trans fats
not only raise the LDLs (bad cholesterol) but also lower HDLs, the good
cholesterol.
Moderation is key
In fact, for maximum health, 20 percent good fat, although Harvard
studies say there is no good evidence for any optimal amount of fat. 20% is a
good starting point. I have been advised by my registered dietician to allow as
much as 30% calories from fats.
It has to be "good" fats. So who are the good guys of fat?
These include Extra virgin olive oil, avocado, flax seed oil, almonds, walnuts,
salmon and cold-water fish. While it is best to stop frying with oil, Grape
seed oil is great for caramelizing food, because it has a higher smoke point
than olive oil.
Saturated fats like those in cheese, beef and chicken and milk should
play smaller roles in our diet. Meat fats, things like pork fat, lard and bacon,
should be avoided, along with partially hydrogenated oils in things like
margarines and snack foods. Old oils of any kind are also bad for you.
Fat has to get a new image in the minds of people across the country.
"We relate fat in our food to fat on our body, and that’s just not true.
Fat can be fantastic!
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