I’m not afraid of eating saturated fat. In fact, I eat plenty of it.
“Saturated” refers to fats, such as butter and animal fats,
that are firm when refrigerated. Unfortunately, the term, “saturated,” makes it
sound like the fat is somehow loaded with goop. In fact, it simply describes
the composition of the fat molecule: each carbon atom in the molecule is linked
to two hydrogen atoms such that the carbon is “saturated” with hydrogen atoms.
Saturated fats do not clog arteries. They are either burned for fuel or stored in your fat cells. Your cells need saturated fat to help your body perform important chemical processes and make use of vitamins and minerals. For example, saturated fat makes it possible for calcium to be incorporated into your bones.
Scientists have conducted trial after trial comparing the
health effects of saturated fats to unsaturated fats, such as vegetable oils. The
National Institutes of Health spent several hundred million dollars trying to
demonstrate a connection between eating saturated fat and getting heart disease
but never did find the connection.
In reviewing the data from the numerous trials, scientists
had plenty to say. For example, “…after 50 years of research, there was no
evidence that a diet low in saturated fat prolongs life.…if saturated fatty
acids were of no value or were harmful to humans, evolution would probably not
have established within the mammary gland the means to produce saturated fatty acids…that
provide a source of nourishment to ensure the growth, development, and survival
or mammalian offspring.”
By the way, most fats are a mixture of saturated,
monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Lard is only 40 percent
saturated fat. Olive oil is 13.7 percent saturated fat, which is why it turns
cloudy when refrigerated.
So go ahead and slather your toast with butter. That's what I do.
For an introduction to this blog, see I Just Say No; for a list of blog topics, click the Topics tab.



