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Five healthy must-have fats to stock in your kitchen that with regular use facilitate the path to optimal vitality and wellness as exemplified by traditional cultures.
When folks ask me for advice on how to change their diet for the better, I tell them that the quickest way to improve their health and just feel amazingly better in general (like, feel better tomorrow – that’s how fast this works) is to get the right healthy fats into their diet and the wrong (factory) fats out.
Eating organic fruits/vegetables and grinding their own flour/making their own bread are usually the two changes that people want to do first, but the truth is, while important, these two things will have the least impact on your health in the immediate term.
I am very much a results-oriented kind of gal, so I try to tell folks what will give them the most bang for the buck right away.
Making significant changes to your diet with minimal impact on how you feel every day is very discouraging. That is why I tell people to get the fats right from the get-go.
The sad truth is that most folks have the fats totally wrong, even if they claim to eat healthily. Another eye-opening truth is that you have absolutely no chance at health if you don’t have the fats right! This is the critical first step toward your best health.
Get the healthy fats right and even if you continue to eat conventional produce and meats (I don’t necessarily advocate this – I am just trying to make a point), your health will blow away anyone who eats everything organic and has the fats wrong!
I know this from personal experience. Getting the fats right was the single change that I made almost ten years ago that finally made me feel terrific after years of eating organic fruits/veggies and meats and still feeling pretty lousy much of the time.
Surprised? Well, consider this. The cell wall of every single cell in the human body is made up of fat. Our very brain is made up of approximately 60% fat.
Don’t those two factoids right there indicate in flashing neon lights the incredible importance of getting the right fats into our diet and how devastating eating the wrong ones can be? I hope anyone reading this blog isn’t still under the incredibly dangerous notion that eating a low-fat diet is a healthy thing to do.
If you are new to the idea that fats can be healthy, check out my article on the scam of skim milk.
Also note that every single healthy ancestral culture on the planet revered fats as the secret for keeping them healthy, fertile and resistant to infectious and chronic diseases. This startling anthropological discovery that conventional health authorities misguidedly gloss over was discovered by Dr. Weston A. Price early in the last century. (1)
With that, I will now reveal the Five Healthy Fats that you MUST have in your kitchen – assuming vibrant health is your goal, of course.
Butter
Ah, what can I say about grass-fed butter? It is one of the most perfect foods on this planet.
Like Julia Child, I have discovered over the years that you simply can’t eat too much butter. And, if you think you’re eating too much, you can always substitute cream, as Ms. Child is rumored to have said!
I like to joke with people that the more butter I eat, the slimmer I get! Butter was my secret weapon for staying trim even after having my third child in my forties.
If you are a butter lover too, you know from experience that there’s quite a bit of truth to that statement!
Deep yellow/orange butter from cows eating rapidly growing spring grass was considered a sacred food by the Traditional Swiss culture, a culture with young men so perfect and pleasing in physique, strength, and character that the Vatican favored these young men over all others to serve as the Papal Guard at the Vatican.
Want your children to have strong, robust physiques and healthy bone structure? Eat lots of butter when you are pregnant and load up their food with it while they are in their growing years. Ignore the low-fat nonsense and see and feel the results for yourself. Eating lots of butter stabilizes the blood sugar and significantly reduces or even eliminates sugar cravings.
Overconsumption of all things sweet and starchy and factory fats are the real villains for those with ill health, NOT whole, healthy fats like butter (2).
The cell wall of every cell in the human body is supposed to be composed of saturated fat, the wonderful fat that is so abundant in butter. Replace the real thing with margarine and the body will incorporate these inferior fats into the cell walls instead.
With the wrong type of fat making up the cell wall, intercellular communication breaks down and the cell itself is weakened.
Skin cells whose cell walls are composed of the fats from polyunsaturated vegetable oils (the main fat in the Western diet) instead of the much stronger saturated fats are more prone to damage from the sun and unsightly brown spots (or melasma if pregnant).
If, for no other reason than vanity, switch to butter and throw out those nasty vegetable oils.
Allergic to dairy and wondering what are good substitutes for butter? The linked article will help you navigate the maze of products on the market for a healthy alternative.
Coconut Oil
Coconut oil is loaded with medium-chain saturated fats which are utilized by the body for immediate energy! Want to feel better and have more energy and maybe even lose weight?
Incorporate this wonderful, healthy fat into your diet in generous amounts. Coconut oil is a highly stable oil, so much so, that you can keep it unrefrigerated in your pantry for years and it will not go rancid (I have a large bucket in my garage…it stays perfect through the long, hot, humid Florida summers!). It remains stable even at very high heat, so it is the ideal cooking oil.
I use coconut oil anytime a recipe calls for cooking oil or shortening. Coconut oil used in your baked goods will result in cookies, cakes, and pastries so moist – you and your family will be delighted.
Tip: I recommend expeller-pressed coconut oil if you don’t care for the mild coconut flavor of virgin coconut oil.
Physiologically, coconut oil stimulates the thyroid gland, so it is a fantastic addition to the diet for those that tend toward hypothyroidism. By some estimates, about 80% of Westerners over the age of 25 falls under this category.
Lauric acid, a very important medium-chain saturated fatty acid, is found in abundance in coconut oil (but not MCT oil also called “liquid” coconut oil). Lauric acid is highly antiviral, antibacterial, and antifungal.
And guess what? The human mammary gland produces lauric acid and it is contained in breastmilk! Anyone with candida issues of any kind should be regularly consuming coconut oil in their diet. Rubbing coconut oil into the scalp and then shampooing out is a wonderful home remedy for dandruff, a fungal infection of the skin.
If you have trouble stomaching the oil straight up, you can also take it as coconut oil capsules. If you have an allergy to coconut, try palm oil, red palm oil, or palm kernel oil, two other healthy tropical oils.
One word of warning, some folks experience skin or digestive issues from coconut oil. This article explains when to avoid coconut oil due to allergies or sensitivities.
Please see my resources page for where to buy quality coconut oil products.
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Without a doubt, extra virgin olive oil is the best of the healthy fats to use for salad dressings. Why don’t all salad dressings at the store contain this wonderful Mediterranean oil?
What’s up with Annie’s brand of organic salad dressing at the health food store using canola or soybean oil? Update: now there is sunflower oil in there too. Has this company lost its mind? No, it is just more beholden to stockholders than customers. Canola, sunflower and soybean oil are all cheap oils that increase the profit margin.
Bottom line: Annie’s is too cheap to just use extra virgin olive oil. In case you haven’t noticed, extra virgin olive oil is rather expensive in comparison. You trade a lower price on industrialized oils with your health, so make sure you buy only extra virgin olive oil and not cheap, highly processed vegetable oil or products that contain them.
If, by chance, you are one of the folks who have trouble with olive oil and tend to put on weight quickly when you consume it, then try another traditional oil such as sesame or peanut oil with a tsp or two of added flax oil for your salad dressings instead.
Please see my shopping list for where to source vetted, 100% pure, unblended extra virgin olive oil.
Animal Fat
Animal fats such as schmaltz, goose, duck, tallow, and lard have nourished Traditional Cultures for centuries. And don’t forget about the rich yolks from pastured chicken, duck, and goose eggs!
Most people don’t even realize that McDonald’s used beef tallow to fry it’s french fries until the sea change in the restaurant industry some 30 years ago in favor of partially hydrogenated fats caused the unfortunate switch to these very unhealthy Factory Fats!
When I make homemade chicken, beef, or duck stock, I freeze in one-quart containers and then easily peel off the fat that freezes on top to use for cooking. Animal fat imparts valuable nutrition and wonderful flavor to roast vegetables.
The reason many kids won’t eat veggies is that they are so tasteless! Roasting organic vegetables in a bit of chicken fat makes them absolutely delicious. My kids frequently ask why the veggies in restaurants are so tasteless and why the ones cooked at home are so yummy. Now you know the secret that Traditional Cultures always practiced!
Beef tallow can’t be beaten for making healthy homemade french fries! Whoever thought that healthy eating could taste so fantastic! Liberal use of traditional animal fats in the kitchen makes this possible.
For more on healthy fats from animals, refer to the articles on how to render tallow and how to render lard.
High Vitamin Cod Liver Oil
Rounding out the Five Fats you must have in your kitchen is Granny’s favorite, cod liver oil. Cod liver oil contains omega 3, essential fatty acids that most Westerners are severely deficient in. Deficiency in these delicate omega 3 fats invites inflammation in the body which leads to innumerable conditions and illnesses. This vetted brand is high quality and no heat processed.
Unlike plain fish oil or krill oil, cod liver oil also contains vitamins A and D in their natural state.
Vitamins A and D, when taken together in whole food like cod liver oil, work synergistically to improve the function of every system in the human body!
The importance of Vitamin D in cod liver oil cannot be underestimated with regard to its positive effects on health. Vitamin D deficiency is even said to be the reason many people get the flu.
Well, there you have it. The Five Fats that when incorporated into your diet will most certainly improve your health and vitality. Once you throw out the Factory Fats you are currently using such as butter substitutes and vegetable oils and replace them with the Five Healthy Fats described in this blog, you will very likely begin to feel improved energy right away.
The most striking change that occurred immediately for me when I got my fats right was a rapid reduction in sugar cravings!
Getting the fats right is the only way I have ever found for people to reduce and eventually eliminate their sugar addiction. Any other approach is temporary at best and relies solely on will power rather than the body being nourished and not needing the sugar (remember that the body converts sugar to saturated fat, so if your diet is low in saturated fat, you will be plagued with sugar cravings that cannot be controlled).
If this is your experience as well, I would love to hear about it as well as any other improvements you’ve noticed in your health once the fats get fixed.
References
Nutrition and Physical Degeneration
Study Fails to Link Saturated Fat and Heart Disease
S.
How much butter do you personally believe is too much butter to use on any given day?
For example – on a medium sized baked potato, how much do you use? Just curious. In terms of tbsp. Even if I use one tbsp, the potato is still too dry. I can’t stop worrying about my arteries getting clogged even though, within the past month of switching to butter, I’ve lost 7 lbs! Something that bad for me can’t help me lose weight (even my skin looks better – it glows and looks smoother) can it? (unless we’re talking about diet pills but butter is not an artificial means of losing weight)
A
Splitting hairs here but, animal cells don’t have cell walls, only plants do. I believe you meant cell membranes
Gem
What are your thoughts on grapeseed oil? I use the organic cold expeller pressed variety. I like that its with stands high heat and has a mild flavor. I use it in lieu of other oils for baking.
Brenda
I’m so glad I found your blog. I love coconut oil and have been using it for years in most of my cooking. I have even been called the crazy coconut lady by my chiropractor since I was the one who introduced the idea to him. But recently I found out I have a food sensitivity to coconut. I am totally bummed about it because I have also started using coconut in it’s many forms in a lot of my cooking since it is so good for us. Now I don’t know what fats to use instead. I can use butter/ghee which I also use often but I would like another choice.
I guess that is one bad thing about always eating the same foods……people can develop a sensitivity to them. I have read that rotating our foods is good for avoiding these problems but I don’t like it. I think if I am eating healthy……I don’t deserve to develop problems.
I also am confused as to what oil to use when making a salad dressing. Olive Oil is very strong tasting and I don’t always want to use it. Do you have any suggestions. I need something that doesn’t turn hard in the frig.
On another note I am confused about Olive Oil because I see chefs and healthy cooking demos where they use Olive Oil for sauteing and but I keep reading that it doesn’t do well when heated and turns rancid. I have read that the Italians actually only added Olive Oil toward the end before serving. I don’t know if that is true but that doesn’t help with the cooking process. Any opinion?
I look forward to reading more of your blog……..I love all the community of help on the internet!!!
Margie
This is a great article. I’ve just started making these switches. We have been drinking raw milk for a month now. One of my daughters has a seizure disorder and I’m starting to find information related to good fats and the brain. Do you have any suggestions in this line of thinking?
My main question: Butter–does it have to be raw? I just can’t afford that right now. I’ve been making raw butter from my raw cream but we (6 of us) eat too much butter for me to keep up. I suppose if I baked ONLY with coconut oil and reserved my raw butter for other uses, I might have enough. But is cultured organic butter a good substitute?
Jami
Thanks for such a great resource site! I recently started taking fermented cod liver oil and found that I have much more energy throughout the day. The first day I started taking it I gave some to my 17mo old and she had the same reaction (didn’t get tired at the usual nap time). Is this a common ‘side effect?’ or was I just badly missing some omega’s in my diet? I find it odd that fish oil would give me more energy… Just wondering. Can’t wait to start incorporating more real food into my diet. YUM!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Hi Jami, more than likely the fermented cod liver oil is just helping everything else in your body to work better and more efficiently. Yes, I find I have excellent energy and stamina as well .. remember that the Roman soldiers had a ration of fish oil each day to give them stamina for long marches!
Ben
Great article. Thanks so much! Question: What kind of butter should I use? Should I use regular old Kroger brand salted butter or do I need to buy an organic butter?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Hi Vaclava, expeller coconut oil has no taste and is great for frying up pancakes, baking etc. It is not good for salad dressings as it hardens at 76F.
Vaclava
Hi, your articles are amazing, really.. great information in each one of them.
Just wanted to ask about a coconut oil..I am using it for a while but only for cosmetic purposes (hair,skin) and been really impressed so far.. But i really don’t know how to use it in cooking. Shall i use it as normal veg.oil for frying, etc.? what about on salads? or any other ideas? thanks.
Bess
Now that I am cooking with lots of good fats, I am having a problem getting all of my dishes clean ( they are either greasy or fishy smelling from my fish stock.) As I hand wash all my dishes, I was wondering what kind of soap would be the best and safest.
{ps What is the best & safest way to clean my dutch oven, as I have burnt the bottom. }
Thanks!!