Today I’m talking about the word “fat,” and the term “healthy fats.” Fats are one of the three macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrate.
A brief aside about carbs: The term carbohydrates included in the list of macronutrients refers to carbohydrate that comes from a plant that grows in the soil. Whether leaf or fruit or root or stem, this kind of carbohydrate is always, always rich in fiber and phytonutrients. Except for milk and honey, carbohydrate doesn’t really exist in nature without the fiber. This means that whenever you come across carbohydrate without fiber attached, humans probably made it that way. But we don’t call whole, or fiber-rich, carbohydrates “healthy carbohydrates.” In a blog about good health and nutrition, you can assume that I’m always talking about the healthy kind. And while it is true that we, as a society, are drowning in stripped, “unhealthy,” carbs, people do not feel the need to keep reminding themselves.
So why the term “healthy fats?” I can think of a couple of reasons. The first one is that we have been influenced by the advertising and manufactured-calories industries to be suspicious of fat in a nourishing diet. We have been told, over and over, that if you eat fat you’ll get fat. And we have internalized this message so successfully that people can sometimes be seen to wrinkle their noses or even stick out their tongues on hearing the word “fat.”
Yet it turns out that this message is wrong. Once upon a time, before the development of insulin, a high-fat diet was the only treatment available for diabetes. As a young physician, I noticed that the less fat my patients ate, and the more refined carbohydrate they were taught to substitute, the more overweight they became. When I shared my observations with them, they were dumbfounded. America has an enormous weight problem, and it’s not because of fat. At least not all fat.
When I first went into practice, fats in general were still being vilified, and people were still being encouraged to limit their fat intake as best they could. In contrast, we have, more recently, come to understand that a number of fats are particularly nourishing, and we now encourage patients to eat foods like olives and olive oil, avocados, nuts and nut butters, seeds (e.g., sunflower, chia, flax, hemp), peanuts, salmon, and deep-sea fish. There may be more, and I am going to predict that this list will continue to lengthen as our understanding deepens, but for now these are ones that most of us can agree on. The ones to avoid are those that were invented in the twentieth century. Those are manufactured calories. Not food. Not nourishing.
In order to distinguish these from the fats that were invented in the 20th century, and which were not a part of the human diet prior to that, we began to call nourishing fats “healthy,” as if the fats themselves are healthy. But they’re not. They are chemical compounds that break down into various fatty acids of various configurations that happen to serve one or another beneficial purposes once we consume them.
Do we finally know everything we need to know, everything we’re ever going to need to know, about nutrition and fats? Of course not. But there are some important things about which we can all agree. And one of them is that nourishing fats play an important role in our diets.
Look forward to this every week. Have you ever put out a cookbook? If so, how can I get one.
Thank you so much for your vote of confidence. No cookbook, at least not yet, but if you search under “YOUR HEALTHY PLATE” all the recipes should come right up for you! Thank you for reading 🙂 RBS