Fat or Sugar?
By Debra Augur
Food is processed and must travel to its
destination: grocery store shelves in our
neighborhood. Food manufacturers make sure
that the food you receive is fresh and not
rotting in the bag when you purchase it.
The process of hydrogenation leads to longer
shelf life for foods such as oils, margarines,
and shortenings so that they won't go rancid.
Most refined oils are solvent extracted at
high heat with harsh chemicals, then bleached
and chemically treated to obtain an oil that
has no color or taste. These products are
used in the making of food stuffs such as
breads, cakes, and cookies. On food labels,
look for "hydrogenated" or "partially
hydrogenated", and then avoid them!
Hydrogenation sounds like a good thing,
as no one wants to purchase rancid foods.
It comes with a heavy price, though. The
process of hydrogenation causes an immune
damaging synthetic fat - known as a Trans
fatty acid - that has been found to elevate
blood cholesterol. As we know, a build-up
of cholesterol can lead to heart disease.
This is putting the fat into food products.
What if we just take the fat out completely?
When grocery shopping, if you see "light",
"nonfat", "low fat",
or "diet", a red flag should
go up. Food manufacturers depend on you
to continue buying their products, so
they work to make sure those products
taste good, keeping you coming back for
more. In the case of removing the fat
from a product, chances are sugar is added
back in as a replacement in order to make
it taste good, keeping you coming back
for more. Sugar begets the craving of
still more sugar, exactly what the manufacturers
are counting on.
Here is where the confusion comes in.
It seems it is a choice between fat-laden
food products, or sugar-laden ones, and
trying to decide which is the lesser of
two evils.
The body requires fat, in moderation,
in order to function. On its own, the
body cannot manufacture enough essential
fatty acids, so it needs to receive the
balance of them from an outside source,
from the foods you choose. Eating fat
actually stimulates the burning of stored
fat in your body and satiates your appetite.
Without that feeling of being satiated,
you will feel hungry, which leads to the
unproductive cycle of overeating, as your
body tries to compensate for the shortage
of nutrients it is experiencing.
Which is the lesser of the two evils?
Neither!
Stick with whole foods eating, the most
beneficial habit you can pick up in order
to provide your body with the nutrients
it requires. When you eat whole foods,
you are eating them as close to their
natural state as possible. Whole foods
eating is an exercise in moderation, giving
you some fat and some sugar, but naturally.
Keep in mind that the less the product
is manufactured, the better quality it
is. When you eat quality whole foods,
you get caught up in a cycle that your
body will love and reward you for, giving
you greater energy and vitality.
Would you want it any other way?
Debra Augur has studied holistic nutrition
for years, put that knowledge into practice,
and has a passion to share that knowledge
with others who are seeking their own
best health. If we are what we eat, are
we denatured, devitalized, deficient and
potentially toxic? Visit http://www.eat-well-to-be-well.com
to learn more, and begin acquiring your
healthiest self.
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