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Confused
About Fat?
Choose Grassfed!
by Jo Robinson Printer
Friendly Version
In my Grandma's day, there was no such thing
as a bad fat. All fat was "good" simply because it tasted
good. My Grandma fried her eggs in bacon grease, added bacon grease
to her cakes and pancakes, made her pie crusts from lard, and served
butter with her homemade bread. My grandmother was able to thrive
on all that saturated fat—but not my grandfather. He suffered
from angina and died from heart failure at a relatively young age.
My grandfather wasn't alone. Population studies
from the first half of the 20th century showed that Americans in
general had a much higher risk of cardiovascular disease than people
from other countries, especially Japan, Italy and Greece. Was all
that saturated fat to blame? The Japanese were eating very little
fat of any kind, while the people of the Mediterranean were swimming
in olive oil, an oil that is very low in saturated fat but high
in monounsaturated oils.
So, in the 1960s, word came from on high that
we should cut back on the butter, cream, eggs and red meat. But,
interestingly, the experts did not advise
us to switch to an ultra-low fat diet like the Japanese, nor to
use monounsaturated oils like the Greeks or Italians. Instead,
we were advised to replace saturated fat with polyunsaturated oils—primarily
corn oil and safflower. Never mind the fact that no people in the
history of this planet had ever eaten large amounts of this type
of oil. It was deemed "the right thing to do." Why? First
of all, the United States had far more corn fields than olive groves,
so it seemed reasonable to use the type of oil that we had in abundance.
But just as important, according to the best medical data at the
time, corn oil and safflower oil seemed to lower cholesterol levels better than
monounsaturated oils.
Today, we know that's not true. In the 1960s,
researchers did not differentiate between "good" HDL
cholesterol and "bad" LDL cholesterol. Instead, they
lumped both types together and focused on lowering the sum of the
two. Polyunsaturated oils seemed to do this better than monounsaturated
oils. We now know they achieve this feat by lowering both our bad
and our good cholesterol, in effect throwing out the baby with
the bathwater. Monounsaturated oils leave our HDL intact.
In hindsight, it's not surprising, then, that
our death rate from cardiovascular disease remained high in the
1970s and 80s even though we were eating far less butter, eggs,
bacon grease, and red meat: We had been told to replace saturated
fat with the wrong kind of oil.
During this same era, our national health
statistics were highlighting another problem, this one even more
ominous: an increasing number of people were dying from cancer.
Why were cancer deaths going up? Was it the fact that our environment
was more polluted? That our food had more additives, herbicides
and pesticides? That our lives were more stressful? That we were
not eating enough fruits and vegetables? Yes. Yes. Yes. And yes.
But there was another reason we were losing
the war against cancer: the supposedly "heart-healthy" corn
oil and safflower oil that the doctors had advised us to pour on
our salads and spread on our bread contained high amounts of a
type of fat called "omega-6 fatty acids." There is now
strong evidence that omega-6s can make cancer cells grow faster
and more invasive. For example, if you were to inject a colony
of rats with human cancer cells and then put some of the rats on
a corn oil diet, some on a butterfat diet, and some on a beef fat
diet, the ones given the omega-6 rich corn oil would be afflicted
with larger and more aggressive tumors.
Meanwhile, unbeknownst to us, we were getting
a second helping of omega-6s from our animal products. Starting
in the 1950s, the meat industry had begun taking our animals off
pasture and fattening them on grains high in omega-6s, adding to
our intake of these potentially cancer-promoting fats.
In the early 1990s, we learned that our modern
diet was harboring yet another unhealthy fat: trans-fatty acids.
Trans-fatty acids are formed during the hydrogenation process that
converts vegetable oil into margarine and shortening. Carefully
designed studies were showing that these manmade fats are worse
for our cardiovascular system than the animal fats they replaced.
Like some saturated fats, they raise our bad cholesterol. But unlike
the fats found in nature, they also lower our good cholesterol—delivering
a double whammy to our coronary arteries.
"Maybe butter is better after all," conceded the health
experts.
Given all this conflicting advice about fat,
consumers were ready to lob their tubs of margarine at their doctors.
For decades they had been skimping on butter, even though margarine
tasted little better than salty Vaseline. Now they were being told
that margarine might increase their
risk of a heart attack!
Some people revolted by trying to abandon
fat altogether. For breakfast, they made do with dry toast and
fat-free cottage cheese. For lunch, they ate salad greens sprinkled
with pepper and vinegar. Dinner was a skinless chicken breast poached
in broth. Or better yet, a soy burger topped with lettuce. Dessert?
Well, after all that self-denial, what else but a big bowl of fat-free
ice cream and a box of Snackwell cookies. Thank goodness calories
no longer counted! Only fat made you fat!
Or, so the diet gurus had told us. Paradoxically,
while we were doing our best to ferret out all the fat grams, we
were getting fatter and fatter. We were also becoming more prone
to diabetes. Replacing fat with sugar and refined carbohydrates
was proving to be no more beneficial than replacing saturated fat
with polyunsaturated oils.
At long last, in the mid-1990s, the first
truly good news about fat began to emerge from the medical labs.
The first fats to be given the green light were the monounsaturated
oils, the ones that had helped protect the health of the Mediterraneans
for so many generations. These oils are great for the heart, the
scientists discovered, and they do not promote cancer. They are
also a deterrent against diabetes.
The news came fifty years too late, but it was welcome nonetheless.
Please pass the olive oil!
Stearic acid, the most abundant fat in beef
and chocolate, was also found to be beneficial. Unlike some other
saturated fats, stearic acid does not raise your bad cholesterol
and it may even give your good cholesterol a little boost. Hooray!
Then, at the tail end of the 20th century,
two more
"good" fats were added to the roster—omega-3 fatty
acids and conjugated linoleic acid, or CLA, the fat found in the
meat and dairy products of ruminants. Both of these fats show signs
of being potent weapons against cancer. However, the omega-3s may
be the best of all the good fats because they are also linked with
a lower risk of virtually all the so-called "diseases of civilization," including
cardiovascular disease, depression, ADHD, diabetes, Alzheimer's
disease, obesity, asthma, and autoimmune diseases.
So, some of you may be wondering, what does
this brief history of fat have to do with grassfarming? Few people
realize that all omega-3s originate in the green leaves of plants
and algae. Fish have large amounts of this good fat because they
eat small fish that eat smaller fish that dine on omega-3 rich
algae and phytoplankton. Grazing animals have more omega-3s because
they get the omega-3s directly from the grass. In both cases, the
omega-3s are ultimately passed on to humans, the top of the food
chain.
Products from grassfed animals offer us more
than omega-3s. They contain significant amounts of two "good" fats,
monounsaturated oils and stearic acid, but no manmade trans-fatty
acids. They are also the richest known natural source of CLA and
contain extra amounts of vitamin E and beta-carotene. Finally,
grassfed meat is lower than feedlot meat in total fat and calories,
making it ideally suited for our sedentary lifestyles.
I don't believe it's a matter of luck or chance
that grassfed products have so many of the good fats but so few
of the bad. In fact, I'll wager that the more that is discovered
about fat in the coming years, the more grassfed meat will shine.
The reason for my confidence is simple: our bodies are superbly
adapted to this type of food. In the distant past, grassfed meat
was the only meat around. Our hunter-gatherer ancestors either
brought home a grazing ruminant such as elk, deer, or bison, or
a predator that preyed on those animals. Either way, the nutrients
found in grass made their way into the animals' flesh, and ultimately,
into our own.
Over the eons, our bodies began to "expect"
the kinds and amounts of fat found in grassfed meat. Our hearts
counted on the omega-3s to stabilize their rhythm and keep blood
clots from forming. Our brain cells relied on omega-3 to build
flexible, receptor-rich membranes. Our immune systems used the
omega-3s and CLA to help fend off cancer. And because wild game
is relatively lean, our bodies weren't burdened with unnecessary
amounts of fat or calories.
When we switch from grainfed to grassfed meat,
then, we are simply returning to our original diet, the diet that
is most in harmony with our physiology. Every cell and system of
our bodies function better when we eat products from animals raised
on grass.
Jo Robinson is a New York Times bestselling
writer. She is the author or coauthor of 11 nationally published
books including Pasture Perfect, which is a comprehensive overview
of the benefits of choosing products from pasture-raised animals,
and The Omega Diet (with Dr. Artemis Simopoulos) that describes
an omega-3 enriched Mediterranean diet that may be the healthiest
eating program of all. To order her books or learn more about
grassfed products, visit http://eatwild.com.
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