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Why Almost Everyone Is Wrong About Cooking With Lard

lard

Our ancestors ate lard for thousands of years and were healthier than we are now.

Are you like millions of Americans who bought into the lipid hypothesis myth? You know, the one that says that saturated fat causes heart disease and is like poison to your body? Did you abandon the way your great-grandmother cooked, replacing healthy animal fats with synthetic hydrogenated oils for fear of ruining your health? If so, you are not alone.

The good news is that your great-grandmother was probably right all along. In fact, our ancestors ate lard and other natural saturated fats for thousands of years and were comparably healthier than we are now.

In spite of modern medicine, we are not living much longer than people 2,000 years ago, so something must be wrong. Moreover, degenerative diseases such as heart disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and arthritis were extremely rare before the 1900s.

The Good News

Recent, breaking research has confirmed what many have known for years: natural saturated fat does not cause heart disease or stroke. Now, it will just be a matter of time before this information makes its way into mainstream medicine, thereby splitting the lipid hypothesis wide open.

We must prepare for it to trickle down slowly as paradigms do take a while to change. This is a challenge for health academics for sure who have spent the better part of their career advising against consumption of saturated fat. Plain and simple, it takes people a while to admit that they are wrong.

The Rise Of Dangerous Cottonseed Oil

It will take an even longer time before food manufacturers make the shift. This is mostly because there is extreme profit in cheap hydrogenated oils such as cottonseed. Interestingly enough, people saw cottonseed oil as waste in 1860, used it for fertilizer in 1870, fed it to cattle in 1880, and turned it into table food by 1890.

In the early 1900s, Proctor and Gamble were growing and harvesting cotton and began to experiment with the cottonseed (a byproduct of cotton). They wanted to see if they could do anything with it to expand their profits. After some experimentation, they found that by heating and pressing the seed, they could extract an oil. Furthermore, this process was easy and inexpensive, making it highly desirable. Companies used this process of hydrogenation to make the oil last a long time, and when it cooled it looked just like lard. We knew this product as Crisco (the recipe has since been replaced with soybean oil).

 

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It was at this point in food manufacturing that the decision to market cottonseed oil had a terrible and far-reaching impact on the health of millions of Americans. Crisco was touted as being a cheaper and healthier alternative to lard. Early on, Proctor and Gamble even gave away free cookbooks with each purchase of Crisco that replaced lard and butter with the dangerous oil.

Today, the packaged or processed food that you find in your local grocery store uses cottonseed oil. The list includes such things as chips, cookies, crackers, bread, salad dressings — even soaps, shampoos, and makeup.

This oil contains 50 percent omega-6 fatty acids. Although we have a small amount of omega-6 in our body, too much causes inflammation. Most lifestyle illnesses today are the result of inflammation.

Not long after cottonseed oil infiltrated our food supply, diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, cancer, multiple sclerosis, and autism skyrocketed.

On the other hand, saturated fat such as what you can find in lard is actually good for the body.

Saturated Fat Is Necessary For Strong Bones

Your body can’t effectively incorporate calcium into bone without saturated fat. Dr. Mary Enig, PhD., leading expert on dietary fats, recommends that 50 percent of fat in our diet should come from saturated sources.

Saturated Fat Keeps Lungs Healthy

In order for lungs to function properly, a thin layer of lung surfactant needs to coat them. This material consists of 100 percent saturated fatty acids. If we replace this fat with non-saturated types, the surfactant does not work properly and we may experience breathing problems.

Saturated Fat Keeps Your Brain Healthy

The brain is made up of fat and cholesterol. In addition, most of the fatty acids in the brain are saturated. When we eliminate saturated fats from our diet, we rob our brains and they cannot function properly.

Saturated Fat Builds A Strong Immune System

Saturated fat keeps the immune system strong. When we lose saturated fatty acids in white blood cells, they have a hard time identifying and destroying foreign invaders such as bacteria, fungi, and viruses.

Saturated Fat Is Good For Your Heart

This is perhaps the biggest shock of all. What health experts once thought to be detrimental to cardiovascular health they are now recognizing as being beneficial. Saturated fat reduces lipoprotein (a), which correlates strongly with the risk of heart disease. Additionally, studies show that when women diet, those eating the most total fat as saturated fat lose the most weight.

Saturated Fat Helps With Nerve Signaling

Saturated fats that you may find in butter, coconut oil, and lard work as signaling messengers to influence your metabolism. This process includes the release of insulin.

Why Use Lard?

Lard, or pig fat, appears to be making somewhat of a comeback these days. Although lard is a saturated fat, it actually contains one-fourth the amount of saturated fat that butter does. In addition, it is rich in monounsaturated fat such as what you can find in olive oil.

1. Lard Is Good For You  

Lard is comprised of 48 percent monounsaturated fat. This figure makes it second to olive oil, which contains 77 percent monounsaturated fat. The primary fat found in lard is oleic acid, which people have associated with a decreased risk of depression, a reduced risk of cancer, and proper cholesterol balance. Lard is also loaded with naturally occurring vitamin D. We are a society that is deficient in vitamin D and we don’t do a very good job of synthesizing it either. Pigs, on the other hand, store vitamin D in the fat under their skin, which is why the lard is so full of it. Consuming lard on a regular basis can help to keep our vitamin D levels where they need to be.

2. Lard Is Natural And Highly Sustainable

Although not everyone can raise a pig, if you can and you let it get to be about 250 pounds, you will have about 20 pounds of lard. It takes about 6-9 months to raise a pig to this weight, and this would give a family of 5 plenty of lard for a year.

3. Lard Is Tasty

Those that cook regularly with lard will testify to its taste and ease of use. From crispy, fried, free-range chicken to baked goods — lard just makes everything taste richer. Pastry chefs swear by it for a wonderful and light crust.

Warning… Don’t Buy Store-Bought Lard

The lard that you will find in your local grocery store is not healthy but is hydrogenated and comes from pigs raised in confinement. Look for a local, organic pig farm where the animals are raised outdoors and are not given any antibiotics or drugs. Visit EatWild.com to find a farm near you.

You may also enjoy reading an additional Off The Grid News article: Lard: Your Great-Grandmother’s Secret To Better Skin, Naturally

Do you use lard? What tips would you give to readers? Tell us in the comments section below.

 

 

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