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Anthony Gucciardi
Natural Society
If you thought you were doing your body justice by reaching for the low-fat cheese or milk, you may want to think again. While dietitians and others recommend low- and no-fat varieties, more experts are starting to realize why full-fat milk, cheese, and dairy as a whole should be chosen. If you want to lose weight and be healthy, skip the skim and reach for full-fat varieties of foods instead, especially dairy.
About half of the fat in full-fat dairy products is saturated, which until recently was the villain of many food myths. This so-called fat fallacy was promoted primarily in the 1950s by Ancel Keys and has resulted in, according to a Consumer Reports survey, 51 percent of today’s average American in either consuming or trying to consume less fat.
But not all fats are created alike.
Good Versus Not-so-Good Fats
There are plenty of reasons to avoid trans-fats and refined polyunsaturated fats in vegetable oils (like corn, soy, sunflower, and canola), but the evidence for moderate consumption of saturated fat, such as through foods like coconut oil and grass-fed land animals, is mounting. (Coconut oil and lard got their bad rap from Crisco and the vegetable oil campaigns of the ‘70s.) A 2010 analysis published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition concluded that “there is no significant evidence for concluding that dietary saturated fat is associated with an increased risk of [coronary heart disease or cardiovascular disease].”
Besides, as dLife points out, if half of the fat in full-fat dairy products is saturated, what makes of the other half? “Dairy fat contains lots of oleic acid (the stuff that makes olive oil so healthy), along with a type of fat called conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) that may help with weight loss.”
Raw and Full-Fat Dairy Benefits
Arguably, the most healthful kind of dairy is the raw kind from grass-fed cows, goats, and sheep that have not been pasteurized. Not only does pasteurization deactivate the enzymes in milk, but raw milk itself contains greater amounts of vitamin A-rich butterfat, omega 3 fats, healthy unoxidized cholesterol, and CLAs. Raw milk can also be enjoyed by lactose-intolerant people and those who suffer from allergies, anemia, thyroid problems, chronic cough, cancer, and numerous other ailments.
Related Read: Is Butter Bad for You?
Pasteurized, full-fat milk from grass-fed animals, however, are still healthier to consume for most of us than their further processed, low- or non-fat varieties. Saturated fats are known to be antiviral (caprylic acid), antifungal (lauric acid), and antiplaque. But the benefits of these fats don’t end there.
If you’re looking to lose weight, keep the healthful grass-fed fats, olive oil, and coconut oil, and ditch the low-fat salad dressings and non-fat yogurts.
2013-02-16 01:45:48
Source: http://naturalsociety.com/why-you-need-to-avoid-low-fat-milk-and-cheese/
Organic dairy is good for you, unless allergic to milk, with the exception that ultra-pasteurization renders the milk unhealthy for it deranges the proteins. If anyone has noticed ultra-pasteurized whole milk tasting watery, it is because some use steam to achieve ultra-pasteurization and some water droplets from the steam end up in the milk.
Organic butter and cream are beneficial to a healthy intestinal flora. But meat fat promotes growth of undesirable intestinal bacteria. Do not eat beef fat, pork fat, goose fat or any other animal fat, with the exception of dairy fat.