Subscribe
to Our FREE Newsletter
Menus
Recipes
Podcasts
Videos
Articles
Products
Books
Ebooks
Resources
Workshops
About
Us
|
The
"New" Fat
“No trans-fats”or
“0g trans-fats” hearken to us from every
food aisle and fast food
restaurants these days. Entire
cities and communities have banned trans-fats from within their
borders. It seems
everyone had jumped on
the bandwagon! But
are the foods we eat
any healthier? You
may be surprised to
learn that the answer is probably NO!
Trans-fats (also known as
partially or fully hydrogenated
oils) were originally produced as early as 1900 and introduced
commercially in
1911 by Crisco. These
fats were widely introduced
into processed foods in the 1960’s and 1970’s as a
“healthy” alternative to naturally
occurring saturated fats. Prior
to the
1960’s, naturally occurring saturated fats were used in a
wide variety of
processed foods to retard spoilage and prolong taste.
Trans-fats were embraced, at the
encouragement of the FDA, once diets high in saturated fats were
identified as
unhealthy. Now,
after over 30 years of
investigation, research has shown that diets which include trans-fats
increase
the risk of coronary heart disease as much as, and possibly more than,
diets
high in naturally occurring saturated fat.
Thus the food industry has rushed to change
marketing tactics and
processes to remove trans-fats from processed foods and labels. However, what the food
industry has done is
to create another type of shelf-stable, solid at room temperature,
spoilage
retardant, man-made fat to replace trans-fats. These
“new” man-made fats are known as
interesterified fats, “high stearate” fats or
“stearic-rich” fats.
Interesterified fats are oils, such as soybean oil, that have been
chemically modified to replace the polyunsaturated fatty acid with a
saturated
fatty acid. This is
done in order to
make them more solid, less liable to go rancid and more stable for
applications
such as deep frying. This
would all seem
wonderful at first glance. We
know
trans-fats are worse than saturated fats.
We know trans-fats lower our HDL and increase our
LDL. We know that
trans-fats increase our risk for
coronary artery disease. But do we know what interesterified fats will
do? Recent research
has shown that
interesterified fats may be even worse
for us than trans-fats.
In a paper
published online in the January 15, 2007 issue of
Nutrition
and Metabolism, Dr Kalyana Sundram reported that compared
with a
diet high in palm olein (a saturated fat), diets high in either trans
fats or
interesterified fats significantly raise both LDL/HDL ratio and fasting
blood
glucose while significantly reducing fasting insulin levels. In fact, after only 4 weeks, diets high in interesterified
fats lowered blood insulin
levels by 22% and raised fasting glucose levels by as much as 20%. With results like these,
the health
implications surrounding interesterified fats seem sobering.
So now that we
know, what do we do? God has provided us with an abundance of healthy
and tasty
food and it comes to us beautifully packaged in greens, in fields and
on trees. Eating
the majority of our calories from
nutrient dense, plant-based foods prepared simply not only eases our
pocketbooks,
shortens our waistline, decreases our incidence of disease, it also
sets us
free from worrying about the long term health effects of man-made food. What could be simpler or
easier?
|
|