Guest guest Posted May 22, 2010 Report Share Posted May 22, 2010 Thanks! Yeah, the " saturated fat " debate has become very polarized, and I think (obviously) that iron is the missing link in the debate. One study I read specifically used coconut oil as an iron-absorption-enhancer. I didn't figure this out until I started having some issues (heart arrhythmia) that seemed to occur mainly when I ate vitamin C or beef ... both of which I figured were good for me! But I was taking the vitamin C with meals, which of course enhance absorption of all that healthy food I was eating. Eeesh. My homemade molasses beer was probably part of the issue too, plus our high-iron well water. In terms of this microbial nutrition group, molasses is commonly used to help grow yeast/bacteria (think molasses beer, water kefir, EM). But the iron content isn't lowered by the fermentation process: the iron stays, albeit in a different (more absorbable?) form. Anyway, my current experimentation seems to be working: my heart is doing fine, my BP is down 20 points, my joints don't crack. Interestingly, my " age spots " (which I've had since I was 30) are fading. On Sat, May 22, 2010 at 11:32 AM, <doopt@...> wrote: > What an excellent post! > I've been reading quite a lot on these exact topics lately--especially > the high iron business and have come to believe high iron, high ferritin > are > hugely detrimental to good health. I also take calcium (and some chromium > picolinate) when eating high iron foods to avoid absorption as well as > smaller amounts of magnesium, zinc, and vitamin D to balance things out. > It > didn't register with me that coconut oil (or saturated fat) was enhancing > iron > availability. That's very good info. Thanks. > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > ------------------------------------ > > The whole " saturated fat " debate is an interesting one. The latest > research > goes something like this: > > 1. Polyunsaturated fats are very, very unstable. They go rancid quickly. > > 2. For this reason, many of the polyunsaturated fats you buy are > " saturated " > ... that is, they add hydrogen atoms to them. This makes the fat " stiffer " > and also more stable. Used a whole lot for frying. > > 3. Naturally saturated fats are the stiff ones, like cow fat. > > 4. Monunsaturated fats, like olive oil, are pretty stable, and not stiff. > > The #1 fats have been shown to cause heart disease. Feeding corn or > safflower oil to mice is a standard way to cause athlerosclerosis in mice, > and corn/safflower oil consumption tracks with heart disease in humans > too. > It's not so much the heat processing as the fact they are very unstable, > and > they are unstable in your body too. > > The artificially saturated fats (#2: the " trans fats) have also been shown > to cause heart disease. There is so much evidence against them that New > York > banned them. Really bad stuff, and there isn't any controversy about it > even. > > #4 fats, the monos, like olive oil, don't cause heart disease. Some people > think, though, that if they are protective it's not because of the oil so > much as because of the olive extract that is in the oil. Olive extract is > a > very potent antioxidant. > > The #3 fats are where the controversy is. Naturally saturated fats. Some > people believe they cause heart disease: some people don't. The thing is, > the studies aren't very good. Most of them track " all fats " ... which > includes, in the US, mostly #1 and #2 fats. But if you look at places like > Thailand, where they eat a LOT of naturally saturated coconut oil, the > coconut oil is not causing heart disease. So people are now thinking > coconut > oil does not cause heart disease. Pure cow fat doesn't appear to cause > heart > disease either. > > And yet some studies DO link saturated fat to heart disease. So what is > going on? My take is that there is one thing we know saturated fat does: > it > increases iron absorption. High iron levels DO track with heart disease > (and > metabolic syndrome in general). So if a person eats, say, a meal of steak > and potatoes and enriched bread, the saturated fat allows the iron in the > steak, potatoes, and enriched bread (all quite high in iron), to get > absorbed, and iron levels in the US are very high compared to other > countries. While the Thai guy who eats rice and fish, with coconut oil, > does > not get a bunch of iron at all. > > Anyway, we use mainly coconut oil: it is quite stable, and has good > antiviral stuff in it. I also use olive oil, and it is nice on salads, > esp. > mixed with fresh-squeezed garlic. And when I eat steak, I take a calcium > pill with it: the calcium blocks the iron. Also I donate blood, which is a > really efficient way to get rid of lots of iron! > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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