My mom has lived to 88 on real butter, tons of it. Maybe its just genetics, though. Most of my life I have eaten margerine, the last few years, its been "I Can't Believe its not Butter" in the spray or soft tub. Or Smart Balance which has canola oil in it, but doesn't taste as good.
Okay, here are the common myths of butter vs margerine:
Let's bust some 'interesting' myths about butter vs. margarine
BARBARA QUINN
Knight Ridder News Service
Margarine was originally manufactured to fatten turkeys.
In truth, margarine was formulated by a French pharmacist in 1869 in response to a contest held by Emperor Napoleon III to find a suitable replacement for butter.
Butter has been around for centuries while margarine has been around for less than 100 years.
1998 marked the 125th anniversary of the United States patent for margarine. It was used in Europe before that.
Margarine and butter have the same amount of calories.
True, unless you use a lower fat version of either.
Butter is slightly higher in saturated fat — 8 grams versus 5 grams in margarine.
Butter typically contains 7 or more grams of saturated fat — the one implicated in heart disease risk — per tablespoon. Most soft (tub or liquid) margarines contain less than 2 grams of saturated fat.
Eating margarine can increase heart disease in women by 53 percent over eating the same amount of butter, according to a recent Harvard Medical Study.
What this research really said was women who ate 4 teaspoons a day of stick margarine — the form which typically contains the most saturated and trans fats — had a 50 percent greater risk for heart disease than those who ate margarine only rarely.
Butter has many nutritional benefits where margarine has only a few.
Butter is 100 percent fats. So is margarine. They differ in the type of fat they contain. Butter is mostly saturated fat and contains cholesterol. Margarine is mostly unsaturated fat and contains no cholesterol.
Margarine is very high in trans fatty acids (the fat that increases bad LDL cholesterol and lowers good HDL cholesterol).
Read the label. Soft (liquid or tub) margarines are usually very low in trans fats. Some margarine contains no trans fats.
full article: http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/living/health/14179966.htm
What do you eat and why? TW
Okay, here are the common myths of butter vs margerine:
Let's bust some 'interesting' myths about butter vs. margarine
BARBARA QUINN
Knight Ridder News Service
Margarine was originally manufactured to fatten turkeys.
In truth, margarine was formulated by a French pharmacist in 1869 in response to a contest held by Emperor Napoleon III to find a suitable replacement for butter.
Butter has been around for centuries while margarine has been around for less than 100 years.
1998 marked the 125th anniversary of the United States patent for margarine. It was used in Europe before that.
Margarine and butter have the same amount of calories.
True, unless you use a lower fat version of either.
Butter is slightly higher in saturated fat — 8 grams versus 5 grams in margarine.
Butter typically contains 7 or more grams of saturated fat — the one implicated in heart disease risk — per tablespoon. Most soft (tub or liquid) margarines contain less than 2 grams of saturated fat.
Eating margarine can increase heart disease in women by 53 percent over eating the same amount of butter, according to a recent Harvard Medical Study.
What this research really said was women who ate 4 teaspoons a day of stick margarine — the form which typically contains the most saturated and trans fats — had a 50 percent greater risk for heart disease than those who ate margarine only rarely.
Butter has many nutritional benefits where margarine has only a few.
Butter is 100 percent fats. So is margarine. They differ in the type of fat they contain. Butter is mostly saturated fat and contains cholesterol. Margarine is mostly unsaturated fat and contains no cholesterol.
Margarine is very high in trans fatty acids (the fat that increases bad LDL cholesterol and lowers good HDL cholesterol).
Read the label. Soft (liquid or tub) margarines are usually very low in trans fats. Some margarine contains no trans fats.
full article: http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/living/health/14179966.htm
What do you eat and why? TW