I heard from a few med students discuss butters that are not 100% real butter, but made out of vegetable oil are far worse for your heart than the original article. Is that true with Fleischmann's olive oil butter? I basically cook everything with this stuff, I don't know if it's 100% real olive oil, but if it's bad for me I would stop.Anyone knowledgeable out there?
3/12/2007 10:41:31 PM
Read the label, then report back.
3/12/2007 10:57:56 PM
in order to make it solid, it has to be partially hydrogenated. Which means it is not good for you.
3/12/2007 10:58:11 PM
Um. . .is it still harmful when rubbed liberally on the skin? This. . .uh. . .guy I know was wondering.
3/12/2007 11:23:25 PM
3/12/2007 11:31:15 PM
the smart balance spreads are liquid at room temperature..... and frozen in the fridge. i found this out the hard way, but on the bright side, it will refreeze without going out of solution
3/12/2007 11:46:34 PM
they use palm oil, which is a saturated fat.which is solid at room temps. its on their website
3/12/2007 11:56:47 PM
Who Fleischmann?
3/13/2007 12:05:20 AM
Smart Balance, FTW!If you want the health benefits of extra virgin olive oil then just use olive oil instead of butter... its doable in most non-baking recipes
3/13/2007 12:06:30 AM
I'm not coating pancakes with olive oil, blow me.
3/13/2007 12:08:17 AM
^ have you guys substituted olive oil for margarine and/or butter in recipes before? what type of recipes does this work in...I assume this wouldn't taste good accross the board.and it sounds like Smart Balance is the best spread out there. anyone disagree?
3/13/2007 12:09:29 AM
EVOO is what we always use at my house.can be a bit more expensive than your normal oils.but its all GEWD
3/13/2007 12:36:43 AM
look, as a rule of thumb, margarines, shortening, and other solid at room temperature edible fats made out of vegetable oils, contain partially hydrogenated fats, which results in trans-fatty acids, which are medically proven to be worse than saturated fats.however, the newer ones, contain no hydrogenated oils or TFAs, and they advertise that prominently on the tubs/bottles. but, i still don't know how they do that, i.e, make them solid without hydrogenating them.to hydrogenate is to just pass hydrogen through the oils. this solidifies them, which is advantageous for many reasons:improves shelf-lifeeasy to transporteasy to comsumebut it also makes them killers. the harder the product, the worse it is for you. so, you should avoid hard margarines at all cost. however, some of these newer spreads contain no TFAs or hydrogenated oils, as i said, and i still don't know how.however, i still don't consume them, because maybe something will be found in them 5 years now which turns out to be harmful.i like the real thing: olive oil.i put it on (drizzle on cooked foods) every food imaginable: main meals, salads, sandwiches, hot cereals (porridges), etc.there is nothing healthier than it. countless scientific and population studies back it up.there is a reason greeks on a certain island drink it by the glass in the morning.
3/13/2007 5:35:48 AM
damn, i'm thirsty. i think i'll reach for a glass of olive oil.
3/13/2007 6:44:12 AM
ok i did a bit of research on their website.they have 4 kinds of spreads:originallightunsaltedmade with olive oiland they have stick version of the first 3 kinds. avoid the sticks at all costs, or use them sparingly. or use butter if not using too much.the spreads (not the sticks) are advertised as containign 0 grams TFAs.see this:
3/13/2007 7:00:36 AM
smart balance tastes like shit though
3/13/2007 10:02:17 AM
All your whiny parents created trans-fat, blame them.
3/13/2007 10:40:59 AM
I use the spray butter.
3/13/2007 11:05:35 AM
3/13/2007 11:15:41 AM
A small amount of trans-fat occurs naturally, but the majority of the trans fat in the American diet is created industrially because too many people cried about the effects of animal fats.
3/13/2007 11:19:31 AM
^ exactly.
3/13/2007 11:20:28 AM
I never said otherwise. But nobody created trans fats.
3/13/2007 11:22:52 AM
3/13/2007 11:24:23 AM
you are wrong.transfats that are added to foods are not natural transfats, they were created by proctor and gamble back in the first decade of 1900s.
3/13/2007 11:27:15 AM
In conclusion, TFA's are bad, the corn surplus is ruining the American diet, organic foods are now industry and we are all going to die.
3/13/2007 11:30:38 AM
^^ No, I'm not. You can't create something from nothing (unless you have some religious beliefs that permit you to naively believe such). These trans fats have existed in cow's milk for a very long time. Scientists merely hydrogenated the oil in the lab. That's not the origin of trans fats on the Earth, sorry. I also never said that the trans fats in foods were "natural."^ Well, we'd all die eating better foods, too.[Edited on March 13, 2007 at 11:43 AM. Reason : .]
3/13/2007 11:41:25 AM
CONTEXTwe are talking about added transfats in this thread, not natural ones.
3/13/2007 11:47:00 AM
Yeah, but he used the word "created." So I wanted to clarify that trans fats are not only in processed foods and solely made by humans to increase the shelf-lives of food products.Trans fats aren't some freak human accident, despite that they're being used detrimentally toward our health as a species.
3/13/2007 11:49:37 AM
3/13/2007 2:20:41 PM
I use Smart Balance and think it works great as a butter substitute.
3/13/2007 2:45:06 PM
So, the Olive oil butter contains some tfa's, but it's not as much as others.
3/13/2007 7:05:37 PM
still some misconceptions to answer:1 - they are not "butters". butter is a natural product made from cow's milk (or sheep, yak, etc), and that's the only butter there is. peanut butter is not butter, apple butter is not butter, and these spreads and margarines are not butters.2 - all the spreads contain TFAs, as long hydrogenated oil is listed in the ingredients. the ones that say 0 grams, contain < 0.5 grams. (again, if hydrogenated oil is listed in the ingredients) so, if you are trying to decide between spreads that say 0 grams TFAs, your deciding factor is not TFAs anymore, but other types of fat, namely, saturated, polyunsaturated, and monounsaturated.3 - you want to minimize saturated and polyunsaturated, and maximize monounsaturated fat.now look at my detailed post earlier, where i compared the 4 spreads made by Fleischmann's.
3/14/2007 10:21:37 AM
The Smart Balance PB is the bomb, it was on-sale at Food Dog the other week.
3/14/2007 10:25:37 AM
do they make that smart balance peanut butter in crunchy form? is it sweet like jif/peter pan/etc or does it taste like the more natural kind that is less sweet? i like peanut butters that aren't sweet, the other kinds are way too sugary tasting to me.
3/14/2007 1:01:21 PM
Does smart balance taste better than ht naturals--i've got to find something better
3/14/2007 1:03:01 PM
yes, both creamy and crunchy:and although i have never had it, i can vouchsafe that it tastes a lot less sweet:national brand: 3 grams sugar / 2 tablespoonssmart balance: 1 gram sugar / 2 tablespoons
3/14/2007 1:19:22 PM
Yea the chunky is what I eat, its pretty oily compared to other brands but its still good. Omega-3's are the new thing in 2007, but there is still a bunch to be know about them as in ratios of Omega-3's to 6 in the body.[Edited on March 14, 2007 at 4:41 PM. Reason : Not really new, but they are going to be featured by food companies more. ]
3/14/2007 4:41:24 PM
I've always heard that the ratio should be about 1:1 Omega 3's to Omega 6's, but I'd guess the average american is closer to 1:6 or 1:10.Just wait until the public finds out that grass fed cattle are rich in Omega-3's, and then you can watch the cost of a good steak skyrocket. Unfortunately, cattle that are fed a high corn diet don't produce the higher Omega-3 fat content.EDIT:OEP11, what I meant to say. grain-fed usually infers corn-fed. For some reason my mind drew a blank and started thinking about my cows back home chewing off the grain tops of the grass they're eating.[Edited on March 14, 2007 at 5:20 PM. Reason : tww just lost DST again.]
3/14/2007 5:05:00 PM
Pretty old hat, but the general public is starting to learn. So safesmart is less sweet than Harris Teeter Natural pb? I didn't think it could get more un-sweet.
3/14/2007 5:14:49 PM
those of you who are interested, look up "paleolithic diet" on the intArweb.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic_dietin the american population the ratio is around what eleusis said: 1:5 to 1:10, but typically on the higher end. it is hypothesized that early humans had the ratio 2:1 to 3:1 (or in other words, they got 10-30 times more omega-3 compared to omega-6, compared to humans today). although that is nearly impossible to do these days, achieving 1:2 is not hard, which would make a big positive impact on anybody's health.free-range (and natural diet) animal products contain good amounts of omega-3 FAs, but most people don't eat free-range animals. try to buy free-range eggs, free-range meat, etc.and eleusis, better (a lot) than grain-fed cattle is grass-fed cattle, as nature intended. you can buy grass-fed beef on the intArweb. check out http://www.blackwing.com they have the following organic and/or free range and/or naturally fed meats: Free Ranged BuffaloOrganic Piedmontese BeefOstrichLambVenisonElk Organic Free Ranged ChickenPheasantQuailMuscovy DuckGuinea Henbut, the best source is fatty-fish. buy salmon, mackerel, herring, sardines, etc, but here are some rules:1 - stick to small fish2 - don't buy farmed fish3 - buy deep cold-water ocean fishother sources include flax seeds/oil, walnuts. but plant omega-3s are short chain, and marine omega-3s are long chain, and in the brain, we have the marine kind. you would have to comsume 10 grams of plant omega-3s to be made into 1 gram of the marine kind inside the body.so, plant omega-3s are not nearly as effective.stick to fish. try to eat at least 1-2 times a week. more is better. and/or take fish-oil capsules, but again check the source and purity of those.[Edited on March 14, 2007 at 4:52 PM. Reason : ]
3/14/2007 5:43:08 PM
the unfortunate byproduct of fish oil supplements is the gas that they produce. you'll be farting nastily for about a week until your body adjusts
3/14/2007 4:54:14 PM
I just finished up The Omnivore’s Dilemma and man it was eye opening. The whole corn surplus and cattle aspect of food is mind boggling.
3/14/2007 8:14:07 PM
what is it about? how the corn industry has oversaturated the market and ended up in every food product in America?Soybeans are the same way to an extent. there is so much of a surplus of soybeans that we'll gladly put them in everything and forget the consequences of a high soy diet.
3/15/2007 10:15:41 AM
Basically its about that, and the whole "Organic" industry. It's by Michael Pollan, here is an article of his that is a really good read....http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/magazine/28nutritionism.t.htmlHe writes a lot about how we have begun to cherry pick out nutrients and cram them into our diets without knowing the full extent of their interactions and how we have forgotten how to eat real food.[Edited on March 15, 2007 at 10:59 AM. Reason : dfdsfsd]
3/15/2007 10:58:48 AM