The heavily industrialized frankenfood known as Smart Balance should more aptly be named Stupid Balance when you examine the ingredients list!
I’ve had it. Everyone has her limits and I’ve reached mine. If one more person who claims to eat healthily tells me that he/she uses Smart Balance or any of those health robbing butter substitute “spreads”, I think I’m going to scream. This includes other pseudo-foods like Egg Beaters too.
A loud, obnoxious, ear piercing, wine glass shattering SCREAM!
You see, there is nothing remotely “smart” about Smart Balance unless of course, you happen to be a shareholder of the company. In that case, you would be very happy with the cheap, rancid, genetically modified vegetable oils used to manufacture substitutes for butter resulting in a very low cost of production and handsome profit margins.
Don’t think for one moment that Smart Balance could possibly be made in the comfort of your own kitchen the way lovely yellow butter can easily be churned from cream in a bowl with a hand mixer.
No way! A frankenfood as complex as Smart Balance or any of the many other “spreads” on the market requires synthesis in a factory in all its high tech, food denaturing glory. Smart Balance and margarine spreads like it is chemistry experiments, not food!
Get a load of the catchy marketing on the Smart Balance website:
Deliciously healthy alternative to spreadable butter Free of dairy, gluten and diacetyl No hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils 0g trans fat Supports healthy cholesterol levels that are already within the normal range Made with expeller-pressed oils that improves the ratio of “good” HDL to “bad” LDL 350mg ALA per serving
It’s funny how these margarine manufacturers always talk about “using it” and “loving it” like butter.
Why would people do that anyway?
Mmmm. Maybe because these folks need some healthy fats like REAL butter perhaps??
I know a die-hard vegetarian who once told me that every now and again when she craves a big, thick juicy steak, she gives in and eats one.
Smart gal. Cravings can tell us a lot about ourselves – if we’ll only listen – from the state of our gut as in the case of craving sugar and having a gut imbalance problem to craving a steak due to the complete proteins only animal foods can provide (soy is NOT a complete protein, by the way. Don’t even get me started on that one).
So, when that craving for all things buttery comes over you, it is always best to get some Real Butter and slather it on anything that seems remotely feasible at the moment.
A vegan community in South Florida suffering from severe dental decay issues likes to eat raw butter straight out of the tub with a spoon, I’m told. Now, that’s a serious craving for the “buttery taste”!
What Exactly is in Smart Balance?
Let’s take a look at the ingredients in Stupid, er – I mean, Smart Balance:
When this post was originally published, here were the ingredients in Smart Balance (original):
Natural oil blend (soybean, palm fruit, canola, and olive oils), water, contains less than 2% of whey (from milk), salt, natural and artificial flavor, vegetable monoglycerides and sorbitan ester of fatty acids (emulsifiers), soy lecithin, vitamin A palmitate, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, Vitamin D, dl-a-tocopheryl acetate (vitamin E), lactic acid, beta carotene color, and potassium sorbate, and calcium disodium EDTA (to preserve freshness).
Ingredients Analysis
Shall we analyze this rather long list of ingestibles?
- The soybean and canola oils are almost certainly genetically modified. Frankenfood at its finest!
- The olive oil isn’t even extra virgin olive oil and is likely cut with cheap vegetable oils like most olive oil on the market. Can we say cheap, cheap, CHEAP?
- Natural and artificial flavor – this must be where that “buttery taste you crave” part comes in. Excellent stuff if you dig tricking your taste buds (newsflash, you won’t trick your tummy though. At least not for long. You’ll be craving that “buttery taste” soon after and more than likely sticking your head in a big bowl of ice cream by 9 pm).
- Soy lecithin – yet another genetically modified ingredient.
- Vitamin A palmitate – the synthetic form of vitamin A – the kind that is dangerous. Since there’s not much natural about Smart Balance in the first place, “fortification” with synthetic vitamins seems logical!
- Vitamin D – the label doesn’t even specify what type, but I can pretty much guarantee it’s synthetic D2, which won’t help at all in avoiding vitamin D deficiency symptoms. Is this the wondrous, natural vitamin D3 everyone – even Oprah – raves about? Brilliant marketing and wishful thinking don’t make it so.
- Beta carotene color – the normal color for factory-produced margarine like Smart Balance is a very unappetizing grey, so the color is definitely needed here to fool the masses. Don’t be fooled that this beta carotene adds natural Vitamin A either. Beta carotene is not true vitamin A!
- Potassium sorbate – a supposedly safe food preservative that inhibits microbial growth. Safe at least until they find it isn’t. Three cheers for being a guinea pig!
- Calcium disodium EDTA – an organic pollutant which breaks down in the environment into ethylenediamine triacetic acid and then diketopiperazine. Diketopiperazine is a persistent organic pollutant, similar to PCBs and DDT. Not only does Smart Balance pollute the bodies of those who eat it, but it also pollutes the environment too!
Smart Balance 7 Years Later
Let’s analyze the ingredients again 7 years later. Smart Balance has, in the interim, gotten significant press on its “pledge” to remove GMOs from its ingredients. Has it happened yet? Apparently not. Don’t hold your breath on that one. Not much improvement here despite an outcry from consumers to do better.
- Vegetable oil blend (canola, olive, and palm oil)
- Water
- Contains less than 2% salt
- Pea protein
- Natural and artificial flavors
- Sunflower lecithin
- Vitamin A Palmitate
- Beta-carotene (color)
- Vitamin D
- Monoglycerides of vegetable fatty acids (emulsifier)
- Potassium Sorbate
- Lactic acid
- Calcium Disodium EDTA
Let’s analyze the (few) changes.
Little Improvement in Smart Balance Ingredients
First, the GMO soybean oil has been removed. While this is a positive, unfortunately, GMO canola oil is still in there as the primary vegetable oil.
Second, pea protein has replaced the whey protein from before. This is apparently an effort to make Smart Balance dairy-free. Is pea protein any healthier than whey protein? Unfortunately not. All protein powders are highly processed and not a healthy choice.
The GMO soy lecithin has been replaced with sunflower lecithin. This is a solid improvement and a step in the right direction.
Two new ingredients include lactic acid and monoglycerides of vegetable fatty acids. While lactic acid is not really a problem, it could be from a GMO source. The originating food for lactic acid is not specified. Similarly, the vegetable oil that is used to derive the emulsifying fatty acids is not specified. In those situations, I’ve learned to pretty much assume the worst … they are most likely of GMO origin. If they were nonGMO you can be sure Smart Balance would trumpet as much on the label like they have identified the source of the lecithin as nonGMO sunflower.
Everything else appears to be the same.
All in all, Smart Balance has improved from a grade of “F” to a “D-” in seven years. Is it healthy to use? Nope. It’s still frankenfood and not a good choice for those who understand the critical importance of natural, healthy fats in the diet.
Butter is Always Best!
Nothing manufactured in a factory can ever beat the simple, natural, whole nutrition of plain BUTTER and other whole traditional fats. No genetically modified, artificial flavors or organic pollutant preservatives needed. Loads of natural form of vitamins A, D, and E that really will boost your immune system unlike the synthetic versions in margarine spreads like Smart Balance.
Be sure not to buy butter from cows fed genetically modified feed, however, like Kerry Gold is rumored to do.
Grass-fed butter is what you are looking for (quality sources)!
Butterfat is far superior to the rancid, highly processed vegetable oils in Smart Balance. While not hydrogenated, the edible oil processing, called interesterification, is still very much denaturing and is arguably worse for cardiovascular health than transfats.
On the other hand, butter, particularly grass-fed butter, is one of the richest sources of vitamin K2. Vitamin K2 is the magical X-Factor written about by Dr. Weston A. Price which is known to prevent arterial calcification which is a very strong (if not the strongest) predictor of cardiovascular disease risk, NOT cholesterol levels. Natural cholesterol in the diet supplied in forms such as grass-fed butter and eggs are extremely beneficial to health!
Folks with low cholesterol suffer from heart disease at the same rate as those with high cholesterol. Don’t tell that to the folks in the marketing department at Smart Balance, though. They’re doing really well with that catchy marketing slogan that associates the use of Smart Balance with “healthy” cholesterol levels.
What if You Have a Dairy Allergy?
For those with dairy allergies, natural and truly healthy butter substitute spreads made with unrefined traditional oils are now becoming available. This one is my favorite which blends virgin coconut oil and that anti-oxidant powerhouse, red palm oil without any additives, fillers, GMOs or destructive processing.
Once you get past the marketing hype, it sure seems that the more appropriate name for Smart Balance would be “Stupid Balance”, don’t you think?
References
Interesterification of Vegetable Oils, by Dr. Mary Enig
Whole Health Source, Butter, Margarine, and Heart Disease
Cindy
People need to educate themselves, thank you Sara!
Edward Parker
I’m confused in October I had a stent placed in my heart five weeks later after still not feeling great I went back and they opened two more arteries I’m better with medication and exercise and ive lost about 20 pounds I use smart balance because the nutritionist said good things about it. please help me to make a smart safe decision I just don’t wont to put myself in harms way if I don’t have to
Eric EB
You are right, SB should not be consumed, that is sure, but neither should any fat, like butter or coconut oil, or use oil in any way.
Well, you need a lot more health education. NO OIL that is not part of the plant that is eaten, is healthy to consume. No animal products either, meat, dairy, & eggs are not healthy and are a cancer risk. All of that food group is proven to cause health problems and is a good source for cancers. Animal byproducts all cause inflammation as our body can not digest it and treats it as a foreign substance.
But you are on a good course. Chemicals-chemicals-chemicals. My god, they are killing off the human race and changing our DNA and biology. Roundup has poised the earth. Organic vegan lifestyle is the only answer.
Mar
My son was born August 18th and immediately started having breathing issues due to severe reflux. I cut out dairy when he was about 3 1/2 weeks old to see if it would help since his symptoms seemed to be breathing related. His one month ped appointment, they tested his diaper (while I was not eating dairy, by the way) and said he didn’t have a dairy allergy and to eat whatever I wanted. When I started dairy, his reflux got alot worse, so I went with my instincts and cut out dairy. 1-2 weeks after going dairy free, I started having sinus/allergy symptoms and feeling dizzy. I’ve lived with these symptoms (plus some new ones) for 3 1/2 months now, trying all sorts of different things to get rid of them. I even went to the doctor and they ruled out thyroid, heart, vitamin deficiency, infection, and dehydration. I see a chiropractor twice a week for wellness, and even he is blowing me off on my symptoms. When I went dairy free, I started using smart balance or earth balance, almond milk coffee creamer, and almond milk on a daily basis. Do you think I could have an allergy or sensitivity to something in one of those things that could cause all of my random symptoms?! The dizziness is the absolute worst! It seems to get better and then get worse again, and if food were the cause, that would make sense. Anyway, just wondering what your thoughts are because I love your posts and trust the information you provide.
Sarah
All those “foods” you mentioned are very highly processed! Who knows what toxins are in them from the results of processing that are not listed on the label. Most especially, almond milk in cartons is a highly toxic food. The almond milk is BOILING hot when poured into those aseptic cartons which are lined with plastic which of course leaches xenoestrogenic chemicals into the almond milk. Best to eliminate these types of pseudo foods from the diet.
barry
I know personally, I added smart balance and stopped using regular spread and my cholesterol levels got better. This was shown to me by yearly exam required for health insurance by my employer, nothing else changed in my diet, sweets, carbs, protein, this was the only switch I made. I guess Im stupid for believing the results.
Sarah
If you mean by “cholesterol levels got better” that they dropped … then you are very much misguided! https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/the-9-benefits-of-cholesterol-in-the-diet/
CJ
Pea protein… unlike whey won’t give me diarrhea.
So I do applaud them for getting rid of whey as it’s loaded with loctose.
And I’m not even lactose intolerant. I can drink lots of milk, ice cream, etc with no problem. But whey is unnaturally super concentrated lactose I can’t digest.
Dawn Simpson
Eat all the fake butter you want but it doesn’t have to be genetically modified.
Renee Meissner
Three weeks ago gallstones getting into my bile duct caused an acute pancreanitis attack and I was in the hospital for 16 days. Came home and 4 days later back to the hospital having another pancreatitis attack because I was eating fat. I have to do low fat or non fat diet. I ate a sandwich last night with cheese on it and my stomach is killing me today. I was going to buy Smart Balance today… the lite version and then I read your article. What would you suggest for low fat alternative?
Dean
saturated fats raise both good HDL and bad LDL cholesterol levels; coconut oil maybe not so good for those with high triglyceride levels or fatty liver disease.
Mae
Although coconut tastes great it ALWAYS tastes like coconut. Also, it would be a mistake for any one with a serious dairy allergy to eat ghee.