risk

 food facts  Healthy Organic Food  Obesity and Weightloss  Vitamins & Supplements  Links 

 

 

 

Risk Partially Hydrogenated Oils

risk partially hydrogenated Risk Partially Hydrogenated Oils



Summary
Consuming partially hydrogenated oils is like inhaling cigarette smoke. They will kill you -- slowly, over time, but as surely as you breathe. And in the meantime, they will make you fat!
[1700 words]

Eric Armstrong
Why Fats are Important

The first thing to understand about fats is that the essential fatty acids they contain are truly essential. They are the "active ingredient" in every bodily process you can name:

* brain cell function and nervous system activity
* hormones and intra-cellular messengers
* glandular function and immune system operation
* hemoglobin oxygen-transport system
* cell wall function:
o passing oxygen into the cell
o passing nutrients into the cell
o keeping foreign bodies out of the cell
* digestive-tract operation
o assimilating nutrients
o blocking out allergens

In short, the essential fatty acids (contained mostly in polyunsaturated oils) are the most important nutrients there are -- more important than vitamins, minerals, or even proteins. Because, without them, there is no life. They are the substance and foundation of life energy.
What is Hydrogenation

Hydrogenation is the process of heating an oil and passing hydrogen bubbles through it. The fatty acids in the oil then acquire some of the hydrogen, which makes it more dense. If you fully hydrogenate, you create a solid (a fat) out of the oil. But if you stop part way, you a semi-solid partially hydrogenated oil that has a consistency like butter, only it's a lot cheaper.

Because of that consistency, and because it is cheap, it is a big favorite as a butter-substitute among "food" producers. It gives their products a richer flavor and texture, but doesn't cost near as much as it would to add butter.

Note:
Until the 1970's, food producers used coconut oil to get that buttery flavor and texture. The American obesity epidemic began when it was replaced with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil -- most often soybean oil. For more information, see Coconut Oil and Palm Kernel Oil: Miracle Medicine and Diet Pill.

What's Wrong with Hydrogenation

Unlike butter or virgin coconut oil, hydrogenated oils contain high levels of trans fats. A trans fat is an otherwise normal fatty acid that has been "transmogrified", by high-heat processing of a free oil. The fatty acids can be double-linked, cross-linked, bond-shifted, twisted, or messed up in a variety of other ways.

The problem with trans fats is that while the "business end" (the chemically active part) is messed up, the "anchor end" (the part that is attached to the cell wall) is unchanged. So they take up their position in the cell wall, like a guard on the fortress wall. But like a bad guard, they don't do their job! They let foreign invaders pass unchallenged, and they stop supplies at the gates instead of letting them in.

In short, trans fats are poisons, just like arsenic or cyanide. They interfere with the metabolic processes of life by taking the place of a natural substance that performs a critical function. And that is the definition of a poison. Your body has no defense against them, because they never even existed in our two billion years of evolution -- so we've never had the need or the opportunity to evolve a defense against them.
Partially Hydrogenated Oils Make You Fat!

Partially hydrogenated oils will not only kill you in the long term by producing diseases like multiple sclerosis and allergies that lead to arthritis, but in the meantime they will make you fat!
You Eat More

It's not like you have any choice in the matter. Remember that the essential fatty acids are vital to every metabolic function in your body. You will get the quantity of essential fatty acids that you need to sustain life, no matter what. You will not stop being hungry until you do.

If you are consuming lots of saturated fats, you really have no choice but to become fat, because saturated fats contain only small quantities of the polyunsaturated fats that contain the essential fatty acids you need. The key to being thin, then, is to consume foods containing large amounts of polyunsaturated oils. (Those foods include fish, olives, nuts, and egg yolks.) Over the long term, those foods remove your sense of hunger.

Note:
The difference between a "fat" and an "oil" is temperature. A "fat" is a lipid that is solid at room temperature. An "oil" is one that is liquid at room temperature. Both are lipids (or "oil/fat"). Change the temperature, and you can convert an oil into a fat, or vice versa.

Partially hydrogenated oils make you gain weight the same way that saturated fats do -- by making you consume even more fat to get the the essential fatty acids you need. But partially hydrogenated fats are even worse. Not only do they produce disease over they long term, but they interfere with the body's ability to ingest and utilize the good fats!

Picture it like this. The trans fats are now the guards along the watchtower. The essential fatty acids (the support troops) are waiting outside to get into the fort (the cell), so they can be distributed along the watchtower (the cell wall). But the guards won't let them in! So they have to find someplace to stay in town. Over time, more and more troops are finding lodging in town. So new houses (fat cells) have to built to keep them in. The town grows more and more swelled with troops (fat), and it gets bigger and bigger (fatter). It's not a pretty picture at all, when you realize that the town is your belly, buns, face, and neck.
Your Metabolism Slows

Worse, most partially hydrogenated oil is partially hydrogenated soybean oil. That's a problem, because soybean oil depresses the thyroid--which lowers your energy levels, makes you feel less like exercising, and generally makes you fatter!

Of course, soybeans have been used for centuries in the Orient--but mostly as the basis for soy sauce and tofu. Asians didn't have soy milk, soy burgers, soy this and soy that. Most of all, they never used concentrated essence of soybean, in the form of soybean oil. And they didn't hydrogenate it, and they didn't use it in everything.

Walking down supermarket aisles in America, you find product after product with partially hydrogenated oil--often in products you would never expect. But why not After all, it's cheaper than butter. And it's not illegal. Yet. When you eat out, restaurant breads and fried foods are loaded with stuff.

As a result, Americans are consuming soybean oil--partially hydrogenated soybean oil--in virtually everything they eat. It's no wonder that America is experiencing epidemic levels of diabetes, obesitiy, heart disease, and cancer.
Avoiding Hydrogenation

When you start reading food labels, it is astonishing how many products you will find that contain partially hydrogenated oils. In the chips aisle, there are maybe two brands that don't: Lay's Classic Potato Chips (not their other brands), and Laura Scudders chips. Most every other package on the shelf does.

Then there are the cookies and crackers. Most every single one does. About the only cookie that doesn't is Paul Neuman's fig newtons. Among peanut butters, the all-natural brands (Adams and Laura Scudders) don't. All the rest seem to.

Even some items on the "health food" shelf, like Tigers Milk bars, contain partially hydrogenated oils. Can you imagine that A product marketed as a "health food" that contains partially hydrogenated oils If they want to market it as a candy bar, fine. Caveat emptor. But to market it as a health food calls for a class action lawsuit on the basis of false advertising.

The more labels you read, the more astonished you will be at the variety and number of places that this insidious little killer shows up. Do read the labels. Do recoil in disgust, and do throw the product back on the shelf -- or throw it on the floor, where it belongs.

And it's not just partially hydrogenated oils, anymore...
When I first wrote this article in 1998, I asked myself, "What's going to happen when consumers begin to become aware of the dangers of partially hydrogenated oils Are manufacturers going to stop using it I figured that the answer, unfortunately, would be "No". They would probably just give it a new name. Well, it appears that the worst may have come to pass. Alert reader Robin Jutras clued me in to the fact that manufacturers are now using mono-diglycerides--another hydrogenated oil product.

Deep-Fried Foods: The Ultimate Killer

Fortunately, this information is beginning to penetrate the public consciousness. Recently, a news special covered the subject. The reporter got some of the details wrong, but the general message was right on the money. And the one surprising tidbit of information in the report was the fact that most of the deep-fried foods served in fast food joints are fried in partially hydrogenated oils!

Now, deep frying all by itself is pretty bad. After all, you are applying a lot of heat. But if that heat is applied to a saturated fat, there is a limit to how much harm it can do. A saturated fat doesn't have a "business end". There is no part of it that is chemically active. It's inert. Your body can burn it for fuel, but it can't use it to carry out any of your metabolic processes.

But because a saturated fat is inert, it can't be hurt much by heat. It's not all that good for you, but it's not terrible either. So if you're going to fry, fry in a fully saturated fat like lard, or coconut oil. Or, use butter, which consists mostly of short-chain saturated fats that are easily burned for fuel, plus conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) which improves health (Bruce Fife, Detox, 68). And butter tastes great. It's so good, in fact, that you don't even need to use very much to get a lot of flavor. So at home you can fry with butter to get gourmet-quality food that is also healthy.

Even better, you could fry with coconut oil -- which consists of medium chain fatty acids that contain 2/3's the calories of long-chain saturated fats. They're also metabolized differently, so they're burned for energy instead of being stored as fat. And if that's not enough, 50% of coconut oil consists of lauric acid, a medium-chain fatty acid that's anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-fungus, and anti-yeast. (For more information, see Coconut Oil and Palm Kernel Oil: Miracle Medicine and Diet Pill.)

For commercial deep frying, though, butter is prohibitively expensive. Things were better when foods were fried in beef tallow and coconut oil, because they had a lot of flavor and the saturated fats aren't harmed by the heat. But all that saturated fat sounds bad, so restaurants switched to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils. One "healthy" Mexican restaurant even advertised that they fried in vegetable oil. That would be somewhat better than partially hydrogenated oil -- assuming that they weren't using partially hydrogenated vegetable oil in the the first place -- but subjecting the unsaturated fatty acids contained in a vegetable oil to the high heat of a deep frying vat is deadly, especially when the oil is used and reused all day long. The result would be the same kind of trans fats that you get in the hydrogenation process!

But the absolute worst commercial frying is done by the fast-food chains, who almost uniformly do their deep frying in cheap, deadly partially hydrogenated oil. Any fats that escaped being transmogrified in the hydrogenation process are now subjected to the deep frying process. It's a miracle that any of the unsaturated fats escape being transmogrified, if any of them do.
What You Can Do

For starters, read food labels and avoid anything that contains the words "hydrogenated". That means partially hydrogenated oils, hydrogenated oils, or anything of that kind (and mono-diglycerides, as well).

Note:
In 2006, a new FDA regulation takes effect that requires manufacturers to list the amount of trans fats on their product labels. Much as I would like to tell you that you can simply look for "0% trans fats" on the label, it would be useless for you to do so. The FDA wanted to put the words, "Warning: Trans fats may be dangerous to your health" on the labels--the same warning that first appeared on cigarettes--but the industry wouldn't let them. And the way the labeling law works, the product can contain a significant percentage of trans fat, and still claim "0%". Simply put, the labeling law is nearly useless. For more information, see What's Wrong with Trans Fat Labels

When eating out, avoid deep-fried foods at all costs, and pretend you're allergic to wheat. (You probagbly are! Something like 50% of the population is. See What's Wrong with Wheat ) When you avoid wheat you stay away from both partially hydrogenated oils and high fructose corn syrup--another deadly ingredient in the American food supply that is rarely used in other countries--except where American corporations are involved.

If you follow those steps, you will do a good job of protecting yourself. But there is a simple thing you can do to help protect others, as well:

When you see a food that contains partially hydrogenated oils (especially if it claims to be healthy), put it back on the shelf upside down and backwards. (Sometimes it's impossible to put things back upside down, so at least put them on the shelf backwards.)

To find out why this is an effective boycott strategy, see How to Carry Out an Effective Consumer Boycott.


Sportsnet.ca

No bowl but plenty for USC to play for
ESPN
There will be no trips to Disneyland -- or Alcatraz, as was the case for last year's Emerald Bowl -- because the Trojans start their two-year bowl ban for ...
Stewart Mandel: Kiffin spent a lifetime gearing up to coach, but he's still ...SI.com
Kiffin thinks lawsuit motivated by locationThe Associated Press
Will Lane Kiffin and Pat Haden succeed at USC?msnbc.com
Los Angeles Times
all 1,155 news articles »


msnbc.com

Oswalt, baseball's best No. 3, fits perfectly into Phillies' plans
CBSSports.com
But here's what Roy Oswalt is: The best No. 3 starter in all of baseball, and the guy who makes the Phillies not only a team that the ...
Shapiro has no immediate plan to trade startersMLB.com
No-man's landFOXSports.com
No-brainer for Phils, OswaltCANOE
ESPN -New York Times (blog) -Yahoo! Sports (blog)
all 889 news articles »


Telegraph.co.uk

Chelsea Clinton's wedding declared a no-fly zone
The Associated Press
RHINEBECK, NY — Chelsea Clinton's wedding along the Hudson River will be under a no-fly zone. The Federal Aviation Administration says local airspace will ...
No Hard Feelings as Obama Misses the Cut on Chelsea's Guest ListFOXNews
Chelsea Clinton's wedding a no-fly zone — and other details [poll]Los Angeles Times (blog)
Chelsea Clinton Wedding Location -- No-Fly ZonePeace FM Online
New York Times -Daily Mail -The Guardian (blog)
all 2,810 news articles »


The Age

For California muni bond market, no state budget is no problem
Los Angeles Times (blog)
Arnold Schwarzenegger says we now have, as the state still has no budget for the current fiscal year. But California's municipal bond investors haven't been ...
No end in sight for Sacramento budget stalemateLos Angeles Times
California budget 'emergency': bid to recoup $6 billion in pensionsChristian Science Monitor
Gov. Schwarzenegger calls for more furloughsMarketWatch

all 900 news articles »


ESPN

A-Rod has three RBIs, but no No. 600 in Yanks win
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — Alex Rodriguez drove in three runs without hitting his 600th homer and the New York Yankees used a seven-run seventh inning to beat the ...
No homer for A-Rod but Yankees rollBoston Herald
Two hits but no homers for Alex Rodriguez as Yankees beat Indians, 8-0The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
2 hits for A-Rod, but no HR, as Yankees dominateNewsday (subscription)
New York Times -MLB.com -New York Daily News
all 1,523 news articles »


Boston Globe

"No-Guts" Democrats Make Mitch McConnell Our Putative President
Huffington Post (blog)
The "no-guts" Democrats have turned the country over to the losers. The de facto government right now in the United States is the Republican minority in the ...
Fox News Poll: Republicans Garner 11-Point Lead in MidtermsFOXNews
GOP blocks small business bill. Who will get the blame?Washington Post (blog)
Republicans Block Bill to Aid Small BusinessNew York Times
CNN -Christian Science Monitor -Politico
all 3,846 news articles »


Washington Post

Deal or no deal?
Politico (blog)
That means at least one Republican would have to support it, and there is no indication at the moment that any Republicans are willing to break ranks. ...
Rangel says no plea deal yet to ethics chargesNewsday (subscription)
Calls for Rangel to quit could escalate if no dealThe Associated Press
Deal or no deal with Rep. Charlie RangelWashington Post (blog)
TIME (blog) -New York Daily News -msnbc.com (blog)
all 3,816 news articles »



Globe and Mail

Price rides Pena's production to No. 14
MLB.com
ST. PETERSBURG -- With a little help from Carlos Pena, David Price matched a franchise record and kept the Rays rolling Thursday ...
Matt Garza: '08 ALCS beats no-hitterBoston Herald
Peterson: Fearless pitchers give hitters no chanceSan Jose Mercury News
Rays Turn the Tables With Garza's No-HitterNew York Times
Wall Street Journal (blog) -ESPN -The Associated Press
all 2,219 news articles »


TFTS (blog)

Windows Phone 7's achilles heel --- no enterprise app deployment tool
Computerworld (blog)
Microsoft will be leaving an important enterprise deployment tool out of Windows Phone 7, forcing enterprises to use the public Windows Phone Marketplace to ...
HP: No More Windows Phone 7 SmartphonesPC Magazine

all 337 news articles »

Google News

Common Misspellings include adquire, aquire againnst, agains, agaisnt, aganist, agianst, aginst almsot, alomst alsot, aslo amoung, amung ammount adn, anbd anohter anytying aplied artical, artice, articel awya bakc, bcak baceause, beacuse, becasue, beccause, becouse, becuase beggin beggining, beggining, begining, beginnig beng betwen, bewteen inbetween, vetween bu centruies chemcially, chemicaly claimes clas clasic commerical, commericial consentrated conciousness, consciouness, consiciousness, consicousness containes, countains coorperations, corperations coudl, sould counries, countires, ocuntries crtical definiton, defintion diabeates, diabetis, dibetes, dibetis, diebetes desease, desease ditributed doens doulbe eiter excape, excape especialy, expecially, expecially essense esential, essencial, essentail, essentual, essesital eveyr everthing exept execising excisted fiel fidn firt, firts foriegn fomr forte fomr, frome fucntion, funtion genera generaly gogin, goign, gonig, oging gerat, graet, grat, gret gaurd ahppen, hapen ahev, ahve, haev, hvae, hvea helth heathy halp hydogen illiegal imagin importamt includ inudstry infomation, informtion instade inot jstu larg lief liek, liuke littel amke, mkae, mkea makse, mkaes amking, mkaing mabey medacine moeny moreso, mroe, omre mysef anme, naem, nmae naturual ened nto, onot nowe nutritents ofen oftenly lonly, onyl oportunity, opprotunity, oppurtunity orientate nother, otehr oxigen partialy precentage performes palce poisin, posion popoulation positon, possition, postion potatoe pertend, pertend probablly, probaly, probly, probly, prolly, prolly probelm proccess, proces proccessing pubic quantaty, quantitiy erally, raelly, realy, realyl, relaly regulaion remeber resaurant, restaraunt, restauraunt, resteraunt, restraunt, resturant, resturaunt restaraunts, resteraunts smae sence siginificant, signficant, signficiant, signifigant simpley slowy sose smoe, soem somtimes soudns strat stpo startegy, stradegy, stragedy, stragedy substace suppy wupport surley suprising, suprizing, surprizing syrap sytem tkae tkaes tkaing temerature, tempertaure, temperture tahn, thna taht, tath, thast, thgat, thta, thyat hten, tghe, ther, thge, tjhe ther, theri, thier, thier thne their, ther htey, tehy, tyhe hting, thign, thnig thigns, thigsn, thnigs htis, thsi, tihs ethose, thsoe throught, thru tiem, timne, tiome twon troups truely twpo unforetunately, unfortunatley, unfortunatly, unfourtunately untill uise unsed useing variey, varity, vreity, vriety vegitable, vegtable veyr, vrey, vyer, vyre vidamins, vitermins, vitmins wanna, watn, whant, wnat wnated wass, weas, ws waight, wait, wate, weigt, weiht, weit vell waht, whta wehn, whn hwihc, whcih, whic, whihc, whlch, wich hwile iwll, wille, wiull owudl, woudl worte, wroet eyars, eyasr, yeasr, yeras, yersa youself pitcher pic pictrue ,
 Healthy Food Facts  Healthy Organic Food  Obesity and Weightloss  Vitamins & Supplements  Diabetes Diabeates Diabetic  Natural Remedies Textbook  AMP supplements  Benefits of Coconut Oil Benifits  Vitamin B and it's effect on the Body  Coconut Oil And Pregnancy  Benifits Of Chromium  Benefits Of Protien  The Atkins Diet  Whey Protein: the ultimate nourishment  Quinoa  Insulin   Risk of Partially Hydrogenated Oils  Monoglycerides and diglycerides   Fortified Foods  Heart Healthy Menu  Food Selection Factors  NUTRIENT DENSITY  Nutritious Diet  South Beach Diet  Essential amino acids  The Four Basic Nutrients  Water Intake  Metabolism  douwe egberts colombian decaf  Anabolic steroids 

 


 

Risk of Partially Hydrogenated Oils

risk

 food facts  Healthy Organic Food  Obesity and Weightloss  Vitamins & Supplements  Links 

 

 

 

Risk Partially Hydrogenated Oils

risk partially hydrogenated Risk Partially Hydrogenated Oils



Summary
Consuming partially hydrogenated oils is like inhaling cigarette smoke. They will kill you -- slowly, over time, but as surely as you breathe. And in the meantime, they will make you fat!
[1700 words]

Eric Armstrong
Why Fats are Important

The first thing to understand about fats is that the essential fatty acids they contain are truly essential. They are the "active ingredient" in every bodily process you can name:

* brain cell function and nervous system activity
* hormones and intra-cellular messengers
* glandular function and immune system operation
* hemoglobin oxygen-transport system
* cell wall function:
o passing oxygen into the cell
o passing nutrients into the cell
o keeping foreign bodies out of the cell
* digestive-tract operation
o assimilating nutrients
o blocking out allergens

In short, the essential fatty acids (contained mostly in polyunsaturated oils) are the most important nutrients there are -- more important than vitamins, minerals, or even proteins. Because, without them, there is no life. They are the substance and foundation of life energy.
What is Hydrogenation

Hydrogenation is the process of heating an oil and passing hydrogen bubbles through it. The fatty acids in the oil then acquire some of the hydrogen, which makes it more dense. If you fully hydrogenate, you create a solid (a fat) out of the oil. But if you stop part way, you a semi-solid partially hydrogenated oil that has a consistency like butter, only it's a lot cheaper.

Because of that consistency, and because it is cheap, it is a big favorite as a butter-substitute among "food" producers. It gives their products a richer flavor and texture, but doesn't cost near as much as it would to add butter.

Note:
Until the 1970's, food producers used coconut oil to get that buttery flavor and texture. The American obesity epidemic began when it was replaced with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil -- most often soybean oil. For more information, see Coconut Oil and Palm Kernel Oil: Miracle Medicine and Diet Pill.

What's Wrong with Hydrogenation

Unlike butter or virgin coconut oil, hydrogenated oils contain high levels of trans fats. A trans fat is an otherwise normal fatty acid that has been "transmogrified", by high-heat processing of a free oil. The fatty acids can be double-linked, cross-linked, bond-shifted, twisted, or messed up in a variety of other ways.

The problem with trans fats is that while the "business end" (the chemically active part) is messed up, the "anchor end" (the part that is attached to the cell wall) is unchanged. So they take up their position in the cell wall, like a guard on the fortress wall. But like a bad guard, they don't do their job! They let foreign invaders pass unchallenged, and they stop supplies at the gates instead of letting them in.

In short, trans fats are poisons, just like arsenic or cyanide. They interfere with the metabolic processes of life by taking the place of a natural substance that performs a critical function. And that is the definition of a poison. Your body has no defense against them, because they never even existed in our two billion years of evolution -- so we've never had the need or the opportunity to evolve a defense against them.
Partially Hydrogenated Oils Make You Fat!

Partially hydrogenated oils will not only kill you in the long term by producing diseases like multiple sclerosis and allergies that lead to arthritis, but in the meantime they will make you fat!
You Eat More

It's not like you have any choice in the matter. Remember that the essential fatty acids are vital to every metabolic function in your body. You will get the quantity of essential fatty acids that you need to sustain life, no matter what. You will not stop being hungry until you do.

If you are consuming lots of saturated fats, you really have no choice but to become fat, because saturated fats contain only small quantities of the polyunsaturated fats that contain the essential fatty acids you need. The key to being thin, then, is to consume foods containing large amounts of polyunsaturated oils. (Those foods include fish, olives, nuts, and egg yolks.) Over the long term, those foods remove your sense of hunger.

Note:
The difference between a "fat" and an "oil" is temperature. A "fat" is a lipid that is solid at room temperature. An "oil" is one that is liquid at room temperature. Both are lipids (or "oil/fat"). Change the temperature, and you can convert an oil into a fat, or vice versa.

Partially hydrogenated oils make you gain weight the same way that saturated fats do -- by making you consume even more fat to get the the essential fatty acids you need. But partially hydrogenated fats are even worse. Not only do they produce disease over they long term, but they interfere with the body's ability to ingest and utilize the good fats!

Picture it like this. The trans fats are now the guards along the watchtower. The essential fatty acids (the support troops) are waiting outside to get into the fort (the cell), so they can be distributed along the watchtower (the cell wall). But the guards won't let them in! So they have to find someplace to stay in town. Over time, more and more troops are finding lodging in town. So new houses (fat cells) have to built to keep them in. The town grows more and more swelled with troops (fat), and it gets bigger and bigger (fatter). It's not a pretty picture at all, when you realize that the town is your belly, buns, face, and neck.
Your Metabolism Slows

Worse, most partially hydrogenated oil is partially hydrogenated soybean oil. That's a problem, because soybean oil depresses the thyroid--which lowers your energy levels, makes you feel less like exercising, and generally makes you fatter!

Of course, soybeans have been used for centuries in the Orient--but mostly as the basis for soy sauce and tofu. Asians didn't have soy milk, soy burgers, soy this and soy that. Most of all, they never used concentrated essence of soybean, in the form of soybean oil. And they didn't hydrogenate it, and they didn't use it in everything.

Walking down supermarket aisles in America, you find product after product with partially hydrogenated oil--often in products you would never expect. But why not After all, it's cheaper than butter. And it's not illegal. Yet. When you eat out, restaurant breads and fried foods are loaded with stuff.

As a result, Americans are consuming soybean oil--partially hydrogenated soybean oil--in virtually everything they eat. It's no wonder that America is experiencing epidemic levels of diabetes, obesitiy, heart disease, and cancer.
Avoiding Hydrogenation

When you start reading food labels, it is astonishing how many products you will find that contain partially hydrogenated oils. In the chips aisle, there are maybe two brands that don't: Lay's Classic Potato Chips (not their other brands), and Laura Scudders chips. Most every other package on the shelf does.

Then there are the cookies and crackers. Most every single one does. About the only cookie that doesn't is Paul Neuman's fig newtons. Among peanut butters, the all-natural brands (Adams and Laura Scudders) don't. All the rest seem to.

Even some items on the "health food" shelf, like Tigers Milk bars, contain partially hydrogenated oils. Can you imagine that A product marketed as a "health food" that contains partially hydrogenated oils If they want to market it as a candy bar, fine. Caveat emptor. But to market it as a health food calls for a class action lawsuit on the basis of false advertising.

The more labels you read, the more astonished you will be at the variety and number of places that this insidious little killer shows up. Do read the labels. Do recoil in disgust, and do throw the product back on the shelf -- or throw it on the floor, where it belongs.

And it's not just partially hydrogenated oils, anymore...
When I first wrote this article in 1998, I asked myself, "What's going to happen when consumers begin to become aware of the dangers of partially hydrogenated oils Are manufacturers going to stop using it I figured that the answer, unfortunately, would be "No". They would probably just give it a new name. Well, it appears that the worst may have come to pass. Alert reader Robin Jutras clued me in to the fact that manufacturers are now using mono-diglycerides--another hydrogenated oil product.

Deep-Fried Foods: The Ultimate Killer

Fortunately, this information is beginning to penetrate the public consciousness. Recently, a news special covered the subject. The reporter got some of the details wrong, but the general message was right on the money. And the one surprising tidbit of information in the report was the fact that most of the deep-fried foods served in fast food joints are fried in partially hydrogenated oils!

Now, deep frying all by itself is pretty bad. After all, you are applying a lot of heat. But if that heat is applied to a saturated fat, there is a limit to how much harm it can do. A saturated fat doesn't have a "business end". There is no part of it that is chemically active. It's inert. Your body can burn it for fuel, but it can't use it to carry out any of your metabolic processes.

But because a saturated fat is inert, it can't be hurt much by heat. It's not all that good for you, but it's not terrible either. So if you're going to fry, fry in a fully saturated fat like lard, or coconut oil. Or, use butter, which consists mostly of short-chain saturated fats that are easily burned for fuel, plus conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) which improves health (Bruce Fife, Detox, 68). And butter tastes great. It's so good, in fact, that you don't even need to use very much to get a lot of flavor. So at home you can fry with butter to get gourmet-quality food that is also healthy.

Even better, you could fry with coconut oil -- which consists of medium chain fatty acids that contain 2/3's the calories of long-chain saturated fats. They're also metabolized differently, so they're burned for energy instead of being stored as fat. And if that's not enough, 50% of coconut oil consists of lauric acid, a medium-chain fatty acid that's anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-fungus, and anti-yeast. (For more information, see Coconut Oil and Palm Kernel Oil: Miracle Medicine and Diet Pill.)

For commercial deep frying, though, butter is prohibitively expensive. Things were better when foods were fried in beef tallow and coconut oil, because they had a lot of flavor and the saturated fats aren't harmed by the heat. But all that saturated fat sounds bad, so restaurants switched to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils. One "healthy" Mexican restaurant even advertised that they fried in vegetable oil. That would be somewhat better than partially hydrogenated oil -- assuming that they weren't using partially hydrogenated vegetable oil in the the first place -- but subjecting the unsaturated fatty acids contained in a vegetable oil to the high heat of a deep frying vat is deadly, especially when the oil is used and reused all day long. The result would be the same kind of trans fats that you get in the hydrogenation process!

But the absolute worst commercial frying is done by the fast-food chains, who almost uniformly do their deep frying in cheap, deadly partially hydrogenated oil. Any fats that escaped being transmogrified in the hydrogenation process are now subjected to the deep frying process. It's a miracle that any of the unsaturated fats escape being transmogrified, if any of them do.
What You Can Do

For starters, read food labels and avoid anything that contains the words "hydrogenated". That means partially hydrogenated oils, hydrogenated oils, or anything of that kind (and mono-diglycerides, as well).

Note:
In 2006, a new FDA regulation takes effect that requires manufacturers to list the amount of trans fats on their product labels. Much as I would like to tell you that you can simply look for "0% trans fats" on the label, it would be useless for you to do so. The FDA wanted to put the words, "Warning: Trans fats may be dangerous to your health" on the labels--the same warning that first appeared on cigarettes--but the industry wouldn't let them. And the way the labeling law works, the product can contain a significant percentage of trans fat, and still claim "0%". Simply put, the labeling law is nearly useless. For more information, see What's Wrong with Trans Fat Labels

When eating out, avoid deep-fried foods at all costs, and pretend you're allergic to wheat. (You probagbly are! Something like 50% of the population is. See What's Wrong with Wheat ) When you avoid wheat you stay away from both partially hydrogenated oils and high fructose corn syrup--another deadly ingredient in the American food supply that is rarely used in other countries--except where American corporations are involved.

If you follow those steps, you will do a good job of protecting yourself. But there is a simple thing you can do to help protect others, as well:

When you see a food that contains partially hydrogenated oils (especially if it claims to be healthy), put it back on the shelf upside down and backwards. (Sometimes it's impossible to put things back upside down, so at least put them on the shelf backwards.)

To find out why this is an effective boycott strategy, see How to Carry Out an Effective Consumer Boycott.


CNET

HP: WebOS phones only, no Win Phone 7
CNET
Hewlett-Packard confirmed Friday that it will not build phones with Microsoft's latest mobile software. HP Senior Executive Todd Bradley told ...
HP Tablet Goes Enterprise, WebOS Tablet Due Too?PC World
HP now says Slate tablet will be geared toward enterprise marketZDNet (blog)
HP lists Slate tablet on its Web site, still running Windows 7 PremiumZDNet (blog)
CNET
all 361 news articles »




Reuters

Hungary needs no new IMF deal -PM Orban on ATV
Reuters
When asked if Hungary wanted to get any new loans from the IMF Orban said: "No. The Hungarian economy must be financed from the market. ...
Hungary Tells the IMF to Take a HikeBusinessWeek
Hungary: the Orban crowd likes what he saysFinancial Times (blog)
Hungary Passes Bank Tax Plan Despite CriticismNew York Times (blog)
Irish Times -Washington Post -Reuters UK
all 462 news articles »


Ars Technica

Verizon Wireless: No big rush to tiered data plans (for now)
ZDNet (blog)
He has been named "Howard Kurtz, Jr." by film critic John Lichman despite having no relation to him. A native of Philadelphia, he lives in New York with his ...
Motorola's Droid X display issue: No, it's not another 'Antennagate'Computerworld (blog)
Verizon confirms Droid X screen glitch and fixCNET (blog)

all 662 news articles »


New York Times (blog)

No Cap and Trade? Form Circle, Start Firing
Wall Street Journal (blog)
Republicans, in turn, pointed out that a significant cadre of Senate Democrats, mainly from industrial and coal-producing states, had no appetite for the ...
With No Obama Push, Senate Punts on ClimateNew York Times (blog)
Senate Democrats turn focus to Gulf spill responseThe Associated Press
Senate leaders abandon effort to pass climate change bill until fallBoston Globe
FOXNews (blog) -The Australian -Sydney Morning Herald
all 1,148 news articles »


CNN (blog)

Rush Limbaugh: Fox News host Shepard Smith had no guts on Shirley Sherrod coverage
New York Daily News
Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, left, slammed Fox News' Shepard Smith, right, for not showing the original misleading fragment of ...
Breitbart: No apologies for posting edited Sherrod videoAtlanta Journal Constitution
'Glenn Beck': Media Twist Fox News' Role in Shirley Sherrod SagaFOXNews
Happy Hour RoundupWashington Post (blog)
NPR (blog) -New York Times
all 5,620 news articles »



The Guardian

Microsoft clarifies: No official list of WP7 device makers yet
Computerworld
Computerworld - After divulging a list of five Windows Phone 7 in recent weeks, Microsoft late yesterday moved to clarify those statements. ...
Microsoft beats expectations with $16 billion in revenueCNET (blog)
Report: Microsoft lands Win Phone 7 partnersCNET
Apple Is Not the New Microsoft. And, Yet …Wired News
CNET (blog)
all 1,521 news articles »


msnbc.com

No-Letdown Oostie Second in Sweden
Wall Street Journal
"No one can contact me when I am out on the course because my phone is turned off…. It feels like I've been on the phone for 24 hours a day. ...
No rest for King Louis as he heads for SwedenIndependent Online
Choi aims to keep Oosthuizen from historic doubleIrish Times
Louis's win shows Sunshine golfers' qualitySuperSport.com

all 790 news articles »

Google News

Common Misspellings include adquire, aquire againnst, agains, agaisnt, aganist, agianst, aginst almsot, alomst alsot, aslo amoung, amung ammount adn, anbd anohter anytying aplied artical, artice, articel awya bakc, bcak baceause, beacuse, becasue, beccause, becouse, becuase beggin beggining, beggining, begining, beginnig beng betwen, bewteen inbetween, vetween bu centruies chemcially, chemicaly claimes clas clasic commerical, commericial consentrated conciousness, consciouness, consiciousness, consicousness containes, countains coorperations, corperations coudl, sould counries, countires, ocuntries crtical definiton, defintion diabeates, diabetis, dibetes, dibetis, diebetes desease, desease ditributed doens doulbe eiter excape, excape especialy, expecially, expecially essense esential, essencial, essentail, essentual, essesital eveyr everthing exept execising excisted fiel fidn firt, firts foriegn fomr forte fomr, frome fucntion, funtion genera generaly gogin, goign, gonig, oging gerat, graet, grat, gret gaurd ahppen, hapen ahev, ahve, haev, hvae, hvea helth heathy halp hydogen illiegal imagin importamt includ inudstry infomation, informtion instade inot jstu larg lief liek, liuke littel amke, mkae, mkea makse, mkaes amking, mkaing mabey medacine moeny moreso, mroe, omre mysef anme, naem, nmae naturual ened nto, onot nowe nutritents ofen oftenly lonly, onyl oportunity, opprotunity, oppurtunity orientate nother, otehr oxigen partialy precentage performes palce poisin, posion popoulation positon, possition, postion potatoe pertend, pertend probablly, probaly, probly, probly, prolly, prolly probelm proccess, proces proccessing pubic quantaty, quantitiy erally, raelly, realy, realyl, relaly regulaion remeber resaurant, restaraunt, restauraunt, resteraunt, restraunt, resturant, resturaunt restaraunts, resteraunts smae sence siginificant, signficant, signficiant, signifigant simpley slowy sose smoe, soem somtimes soudns strat stpo startegy, stradegy, stragedy, stragedy substace suppy wupport surley suprising, suprizing, surprizing syrap sytem tkae tkaes tkaing temerature, tempertaure, temperture tahn, thna taht, tath, thast, thgat, thta, thyat hten, tghe, ther, thge, tjhe ther, theri, thier, thier thne their, ther htey, tehy, tyhe hting, thign, thnig thigns, thigsn, thnigs htis, thsi, tihs ethose, thsoe throught, thru tiem, timne, tiome twon troups truely twpo unforetunately, unfortunatley, unfortunatly, unfourtunately untill uise unsed useing variey, varity, vreity, vriety vegitable, vegtable veyr, vrey, vyer, vyre vidamins, vitermins, vitmins wanna, watn, whant, wnat wnated wass, weas, ws waight, wait, wate, weigt, weiht, weit vell waht, whta wehn, whn hwihc, whcih, whic, whihc, whlch, wich hwile iwll, wille, wiull owudl, woudl worte, wroet eyars, eyasr, yeasr, yeras, yersa youself pitcher pic pictrue ,
 Healthy Food Facts  Healthy Organic Food  Obesity and Weightloss  Vitamins & Supplements  Diabetes Diabeates Diabetic  Natural Remedies Textbook  AMP supplements  Benefits of Coconut Oil Benifits  Vitamin B and it's effect on the Body  Coconut Oil And Pregnancy  Benifits Of Chromium  Benefits Of Protien  The Atkins Diet  Whey Protein: the ultimate nourishment  Quinoa  Insulin   Risk of Partially Hydrogenated Oils  Monoglycerides and diglycerides   Fortified Foods  Heart Healthy Menu  Food Selection Factors  NUTRIENT DENSITY  Nutritious Diet  South Beach Diet  Essential amino acids  The Four Basic Nutrients  Water Intake  Metabolism  douwe egberts colombian decaf  Anabolic steroids