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Ghee vs Butter
Ghee, a type of clarified butter, which is a fancy term for pure butterfat - while it has similar properties to regular butter, ghee is like an upgraded version with a richer taste, higher smoke point, deeper color, and more nutrients
Ghee and butter are made up of different components - Butter on its own is comprised of butterfat (churned from cream), water, and milk solids; Ghee, which is rendered from butter, is only made up of butterfat
Ghee also contains butyric acid, a short-chain fatty acid - butyric acid is an essential nutrient for the digestive system because it helps maintain healthy cells throughout the GI tract, and provides energy to the cells in your large intestine
Ghee is a rich source of the essential fat soluble vitamins: A, D, E, and K.
Ghee has a higher smoke point than most fats, with a smoke point of 450 F - By comparison, regular butter and coconut oil only have a smoke point of 350 F, while extra virgin olive oil has a smoke point of 320 F
Macadamias
Contain palmitoleic acid, which has been shown to be a major component of myelin, the fatty, protective coating around your neurons
This protects your long-term brain health, fending off neurodegenerative diseases and mental disorders
Coconut Oil vs Lard
The dominant fatty acid in coconut oil is lauric acid, which comprises about 50% of the total fat content
Lauric acid is most well-known for its antimicrobial properties, since it’s the precursor to monolaurin, a more powerful antimicrobial agent that is able to fight viruses and bacterial infections
When lauric acid is digested, enzymes within the digestive tract form the valuable type of monoglyceride called monolaurin
Study - Nutrition & Diabetes
Looked at the effects of lard and hydrogenated vegetable shortening on the development of high-fat diet-induced obesity in rats
Rats were fed ad libitum (as desired) for 14 weeks high-fat diets containing either high vegetable fat (HVF, 60 kcal% from vegetable shortening) or (2) high lard fat (HLF, 60 kcal% from lard)
Rats fed normal-fat (NF, 16 kcal% from vegetable shortening) diet served as control
Rats fed either of the two high-fat diets had higher energy intake, weight gain and fat accretion than rats fed normal-fat diet
However, rats fed the HLF diet consumed more calories and gained more weight and body fat with greater increases of 32% in total, 30% in visceral and 36% in subcutaneous fat mass, compared with rats fed the HVF diet
Higher visceral adiposity was positively correlated with serum insulin
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
Avocado Oil vs Vegetable Oil
Vegetable Oil
Polyunsaturated fats are the least stable fats as they have multiple binding sites exposed, making them particularly open to oxidation - lot’s of available spaces for the free radicals to enter and mess with the fat
They go rancid easily and oxidize quickly when heated - should be left in their natural and unrefined state
Monounsaturated are relatively stable in comparison to polyunsaturated fats. “Mono,” meaning one, indicates that there is one place for a free radical to enter
Aren’t very heat-stable and are likely to oxidize (but less likely to oxidize compared to polyunsaturated fats)
Avocado Oil - smoke point of 520 degrees F
Avocado oil & olive oil are high in a monounsaturated fat known as oleic acid:
Oleic acid regulates the activity of adrenoceptor signaling pathways which direct the adrenergic receptors (α- and β-adrenoceptors) that help regulate blood pressure
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Avocado oil is high in vitamin E and contains chlorophyll, a natural source of magnesium, which naturally removes heavy metals like mercury and lead from the liver, kidneys, brain and other organs
Avocados are one of only a few natural sources of the potent compound beta-sitosterol
This phytosterol positively impacts lipid and cholesterol levels in the body - beta-sitosterol may even inhibit cell division of cancerous cells
References
1) Effects of dietary supplementation with ghee, hydrogenated oil, or olive oil on lipid profile and fatty streak formation in rabbits. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
2) Avocado Oil Improves Mitochondrial Function and Decreases Oxidative Stress in Brain of Diabetic Rats. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
3) A comparison of effects of lard and hydrogenated vegetable shortening on the development of high-fat diet-induced obesity in rats. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
4) TC, W. (n.d.). Health Effects of Coconut Oil-A Narrative Review of Current Evidence. - PubMed - NCBI. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3...
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