WARNING: Do NOT Use These Cooking Oils!
Are Your Cooking Oils Healthy or Unhealthy?
by Mike Geary – Certified Nutrition Specialist
Author of best-seller: The Top 101 Foods that FIGHT Aging
Do you know which of the following oils are healthy and which are unhealthy oils?
- Soybean oil
- Olive oil
- Coconut oil
- Corn oil
This subject – and truth – is confusing to many people.
Why are some oils and fats safe for baking or cooking, while other oils are actually harmful for your body?
Let me explain…
There is a common misconception that anything labeled “vegetable oil” is good for you. NOT IN A MILLION YEARS!
If you buy processed food or deep fried food, you can usually be certain that these unhealthy oils are used to prepare your foods (or worse, it may use hydrogenated versions of these oils… aka – trans fats).
You may have even bought some of these oils for your own cooking or baking at home.
The “vegetable oil” on the shelf of my grocery stores is in actually a combination of heavily refined oils:
- Soy bean oil
- Cottonseed oil
- Safflower oil
- Corn oil
- Grapeseed oil
In most instances, these processed oils are NOT HEALTHY for you. Here’s the deal…
Fats Fuel Fire of Inflammation
Soybean oil, cottonseed oil, corn oil, grapeseed oil, safflower oil, and other similar oils are comprised of polyunsaturated fats (the most highly reactive type of fat), which leaves them prone to oxidation and free radical production when exposed to heat and light.
These processed polyunsaturated oils cause inflammation inside your body and lead to internal problems such as heart disease, diabetes, and other degenerative diseases.
Note: The oil in whole foods such as nuts and seeds is not dangerous polyunsaturated fat. The nut and seed oil does not cause inflammation, as long as it not exposed to heat and light. In fact, nut and seed oil in natural form is a great source of healthy polyunsaturated fats for you.
By the way, omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids are both polyunsaturates. The best ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids is 1:1 to 3:1. By creating a healthy balance of polyunsaturated fats – especially from nuts and seeds – you prevent oxidation and inflammation in your body.
Keep in mind though that some nuts are mostly monounsaturated (macadamias, for example), the safety
of roasted vs raw nuts is less of an issue for highly monounsaturated nuts.
The vegetables oils listed above – the unhealthy oils – are all heavily refined, which makes them burn with the flame of inflammation before you even start cooking with them. But, here’s the actual order of stability of a type of fat under heat and light (from least stable to most stable):
- Polyunsaturated
- Monounsaturated
- Saturated
Unfortunately, the mainstream health professionals will never tell you…
Saturated fats are actually the healthiest oils to cook with!
Why? Because they are much more stable and less inflammatory than polyunsaturated oils.
Tropical oils such as palm and coconut oils (and even animal fats such as butter) are best for cooking. These natural oils have very little polyunsaturated danger since they are mostly composed of saturated fats. Saturated fats are the least reactive to heat and light, which keeps inflammation from developing in your body.
Thank goodness natural butter is one of the best fats for cooking! Tastes great, too!
This all goes directly against what you hear in mainstream health talk… because most health professionals don’t truly understand the biochemistry of fats, and falsely believe that saturated fats are bad for you… when in fact, they are actually neutral in most instances… and saturated fats from tropical oils are actually good for you as they contain mostly medium chain triglycerides(MCTs) which are lacking in most people’s diets.
In fact, lauric acid is one of the abundant MCTs in tropical oils and is known to strengthen the immune system. Lauric acid is even being studied currently in medical studies for controlling contagious diseases.
To summarize… your best cooking or baking fats are generally butter or tropical oils such as palm or coconut oil.
If you are cooking at low temperatures, then olive oil (preferably extra virgin olive oil) is moderately stable and okay to use. The mostly polyunsaturated oils such as soybean, grapeseed, cottonseed, safflower, etc, should be your late choice for healthy cooking or baking.
My choices for top healthy cooking oils are:
- Virgin Coconut Oil
- Extra Virgin Olive Oil (only for low temp cooking)
- Real Butter (grass fed if possible)
Let me state the obvious. Eliminating oils from your diet can help reduce overall calories. One benefit of cooking with healthy and safe oils is that they can help satisfy your appetite naturally – just don’t pour the oil on because calories add up fast!
Be forewarned so you can be forearmed: canola oil is not healthy for you!
If you enjoyed this article, feel free to share this with your friends or family on facebook, twitter, email, etc.
Want more ideas to eat healthier… check this out:
Surprising superfoods that SLOW aging & boost your metabolism
Further Related Reading:
Unusual Tips to Lose Stomach Fat
Comments
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You state that canola oil is not healthy for you in one article then in another on inflammation you suggest using it!
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Thank you! I am enjoying the articles you send. I feel like I am learning so much about “good foods” for my body. Never would have given cooking oils a thought before!
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I enjoy and derive benefit for your articles but, it distresses me when there are significant errors, such as in the article you stated ” Believing saturated fats are bad for you goes against what you’ve been told by the general consensus.” I think what you meant to say is ” Believing saturated fats are GOOD for you goes against what you’ve been told by the general consensus.
Not trying to be too picky but.. need better proof reading.
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Thank You
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Thanks for publishing this. I have been tryijng for years to overcome that bad information about cooking oils that the mainstream “health experts” and “health media” have been promoting. It is an uphill battle.
I would suggest a couple more points here:
1. Olive oil should never be used in a cooking situaiton where it might exceed the temperature of boiling water. It is unstable beyond that temperature and dangerous chemistry results. However, sometimes, such as for spaghetti sauce, I want the flavor of olive oil. For that I do all my higher heat cooking with coconut oil and then add the olive oil once the sauce is fully cooked and has cooled below the temperature of boiling water.
2. Oils such as soy oil should not be used for human consumption, period! Not at any heat. Not even at room temperature. The chemistry of soy oil is simply not compatible with human biology. However, it is useful for polishing oil-finished furnature.
3. Saturated fats such as butter and coconunt oil are terrific foods to eat for those trying to lose weight. The reason is because they have a very high satiety rating. That is, they satisfy hunger and turn off the desire for more food quicker than any other source of calories.
To your great health!
Jeff Bell
Very Interesting Article.
One major problem: missing any information about WHO supplied this information.
To me this is very inportant because I can not let my doctor (who is very open about natural product use) know about this information (event though I totally agree).
Finally, the order of oil use is exactly what my wife and I use (so I know the information is good).
Ken T