Eat Fat And Be Skinny
Proof: You Can Still Eat Fat And Be Skinny! Bring on the good fats as part of your daily eating.
In February 2013 the Australian Heart Foundation in conjunction with Unilever, provided a little mainstream endorsement that goes some way to correcting the fat phobia or misinformation, but there is still a way to go.
The 2013 revision of the guidelines released by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) promoted good fats such as polyunsaturated and monounsaturated instead of the previous encouragement of a low-fat diet, promoted in the 2003 guidelines.
Although good news (that’s a long time coming), this endorsement is missing a little something. Whilst they have acknowledged good fats, their definition of good fats remains dated. In 2013 the NHMRC advises Australians to replace high-fat foods which contain predominantly saturated fats such as butter, cream, coconut, and palm oil, with foods that contain predominantly polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats such as oils, spreads, nut butters/pastes and avocado.
Past theories (note the emphasis on theories) suggesting dietary saturated fats were the main cause of inflammation, cholesterol, and cardiovascular issues are becoming unraveled and debunked.
We know that butter and cream do not contain the unhealthy, damaging, inflammatory responses of long-term use of trans fats, fat in margarine and spreads.
Among other benefits, coconut oil is a medium-chain triglyceride, meaning our bodies can use it for fuel immediately.
We also know that the nutritional fat profile of grass-fed beef is beginning to look more and more like that of wild-caught fish.
And we know now that sugar is the leading cause of inflammation, illness, and many illnesses that we once thought fat was responsible for.
So, what does the science say about unsaturated fats - the 'good' fat?
Nutritional experts encourage the use of cold-pressed olive oil, sesame oil, nut oils, avocado and nuts and seeds.
Why?
For the same reason we now encourage the use of butter, coconut oil, grass-fed meat. They are excellent for hormone balancing, skin, cellular health, body heat, and dampening down carb cravings.
Some saturated fats (coconut oil, butter, and quality ghee) are excellent sources of fats/oils that can be heated and used for cooking without oxidation issues.
If you only take home one message from this article, make it this. Fats. Are. Good. Do not have fat phobia. I don't believe in skim or low-fat dairy, as they are usually higher in sugar and lower in satiation.
Use full fat and have less. Simple.
And as for saturated man-made fats and trans-fats like margarine, partially hydrogenated oils, 'butter like spreads', and oil blends with good marketing terminology on the outside of the packet? Chuck them in the bin.
All of our posts reflect our philosophy at A Healthy View www.ahealthyview.com A whole real food perspective on food and life. Extremes do not work but clean, whole, tasty and easy food choices can create a lifetime of good habits that lead to a lean, happy, and healthy person. Contact us on our website for our next Low Sugar Lifestyle program or a nutritional consult. Article by Michele Chevalley Hedge. This article is for informational purposes and should not be considered medical advice. It is not recommended to change or discontinue medication doses without first consulting a healthcare provider. References available on request.
Categories
- A Healthy View (507)
- Breakfast Recipes (22)
- Chicken Dinner Recipes (29)
- Chilli Recipes (5)
- Christmas Recipes (14)
- Curry Recipes (8)
- Dessert Recipes (20)
- Dinner Recipes (113)
- Easter Recipes (9)
- Energy & Vitality (3)
- Free Recipes (232)
- Gut Health (9)
- Hormone Health (16)
- Media (86)
- Mental Health (30)
- Mexican Recipes (11)
- Nutrition (202)
- Productivity (5)
- Salad Recipes (9)
- Sauce & Dip Recipes (12)
- Seafood Recipes (12)
- Sleep (6)
- Soup Recipes (12)
- Snack Recipes (56)
- Stress (1)
- Sugar (13)
- Weight Loss (35)
- Workplace Wellbeing (26)
- Brain Health (3)
0 comments
Leave a comment
Please log in or register to post a comment