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Better than Butter JoAnn Guest Apr 28, 2003 21:30 PDT

Better Than Butter

Excerpts From

GOD'S BANQUET TABLE

 

 

 

There is no doubt about it! Butter is one of the hardest flavors to

imitate. It is impossible to imagine a steaming, hot baked potato

without the wonderful taste of butter.

 

How about popcorn? Drench those soft, freshly popped kernels with that

liquid gold. Butter without popcorn? That’s like trees without leaves.

Sky without blue. Birds without wings. Ocean without water.

 

Well, you're not going to believe it! After many long hours of

experimentation in the kitchen, we have come up with alternatives to

butter and margarine that are filled with health and nutrition.

 

We know what you're thinking, nothing can replace the taste of butter.

We feel that not only have we come up with some alternatives to replace

butter but that they actually taste better. Before we release the

results of our experimentation, let’s take a closer look at butter and

margarine’s real story.

 

BUTTER

Butter has a concentration of environmental toxins. Cows are high on the

food chain. Every toxic chemical present in the environment will be

concentrated in butter. Dairy farmers use antibiotics and growth

hormones. Often the field the cows graze in have pesticides present.

These contaminants find their way into butter.

 

The continual consumption of small amounts of antibiotics can encourage

yeast infections and fungi such as candida, a modern day plague. Milk is

the most disrupting allergen in the modern diet. Milk allergies can

increase other allergic reactions. It can cause sugar cravings,

tiredness, hypoglycemia and even skin disorders.

 

Butter is void of nutrients, almost 100% saturated fat, and loaded with

color, cholesterol and salt. In all the disadvantages that butter

exhibits, one small advantage remains. Because butter is low in

essential fatty acids, it does not transform at high temperatures. This

makes it stable for frying because the heating will result in very

little trans-fatty acids.

 

Yet, in spite of butter’s problems, it is by far a much wiser choice

than margarine. Butter does have cholesterol, and when eaten in large

quantities can contribute to cardiovascular disease. But let's remember,

moderate amounts of cholesterol are far more natural to the body than

transformed fatty acids.

 

Butter Replacer

 

1/2 cup cold pressed flax oil

 

1 tablespoon powdered lecithin

 

1/2 cup nutritional yeast

 

salt to taste

 

Mix and chill.

 

MARGARINE

Margarine may advertise that it is free from cholesterol, but there is

something even more dangerous that lurks in that benign-looking tub in

your refrigerator. Due to the processing and super heating of oils, the

natural essential fatty acids that are found in vegetable oil are

transformed into a damaging, sticky substance that contributes to heart

disease, hardening of the arteries and cancer.

 

In the New England Journal of Medicine, there was published a study in

1990, that reveals conclusive evidence that trans-fatty acids increase

cholesterol. It increased low-density lipoprotein (LDL) which contribute

to cardiovascular disease. In other words, margarine may be free from

cholesterol, but encourages the production of bad cholesterol in the

body.

 

Cooking oils are the most toxic food in the modern day diet. The

ingredients in 100% pure corn oil margarine are about as natural as the

plastic container it comes in.

 

http://www.freedomyou.com/recipes/better%20than%20butter.htm

 

 

 

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Ask About Health Professional Support Series: AIM Barleygreen

 

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Guest guest

no this is not a good idea, dont substitute polyunsaturated fatty acids for

butter, you will speed up lipid peroxidation, better use unrefined saturated

fat like butter or animal fat from organic farming

juergen boehm

 

 

 

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Guest guest

---Good Evening!

This was the recommendation! This will speed up lipid

peroxidation? Excuse me? There are no polyunsaturated fats in this

recipe...

 

 

Butter Replacer

 

1/2 cup cold pressed flax oil

 

1 tablespoon powdered lecithin

 

1/2 cup nutritional yeast

 

salt to taste

 

Mix and chill.

 

 

MARGARINE

Margarine may advertise that it is free from cholesterol, but there

is something even more dangerous that lurks in that benign-looking

tub in your refrigerator.

 

Due to the processing and super heating of oils, the natural

essential fatty acids that are found in vegetable oil are

transformed into a damaging, sticky substance that contributes to

heart disease, hardening of the arteries and cancer.

 

In the New England Journal of Medicine, there was published a study

in 1990, that reveals conclusive evidence that trans-fatty acids

increase cholesterol.

 

It increased low-density lipoprotein (LDL) which contribute to

cardiovascular disease. In other words, margarine encourages the

production of bad cholesterol in the body.

 

Cooking oils are the most toxic food in the modern day diet. The

ingredients in 100% pure corn oil margarine are about as natural as

the " plastic container " it comes in.

 

Best Regards,

JoAnn

 

 

In Gettingwell , Pipetman9@a... wrote:

> no this is not a good idea, dont substitute polyunsaturated fatty

acids for

> butter, you will speed up lipid peroxidation, better use unrefined

saturated

> fat like butter or animal fat from organic farming

> juergen boehm

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Hello JoAnn,

one cup of your butter replacer contains 1/2 cup of flax oil and flax oil

consists of about 70% polyunsaturated fatty acids i.e. about 60% omega 3

linolenic + about 10 % omega 6 linolic acid) acid, the rest is about 20%

monounsaturated fatty acids and about 10% saturated fatty acids.

best regards, Juergen Boehm

 

> This was the recommendation! This will speed up lipid

> peroxidation? Excuse me? There are no polyunsaturated fats in this

> recipe...

>

> Butter Replacer

>

> 1/2 cup cold pressed flax oil

>

> 1 tablespoon powdered lecithin

>

> 1/2 cup nutritional yeast

>

> salt to taste

>

> Mix and chill.

 

 

 

 

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Guest guest

---Hello Juergen,

It seems to me that you're confusing the naturally occurring

polyunsaturated fats in flaxseed oil with those which exist in many

chemically altered refined oils (hydrogenated soybean oil, canola &

some others). There is a vast difference between the two!

 

Refined hydrogenated oils are prone to increase lipid peroxidation I

will agree, however the natural polyunsaturates which exist in flax

and various other EFA's do not have the same effect.

 

 

Essential Fats are the only fats that are actually required for

good health. All evidence points to the fact that they do not in any

way increase lipid peroxidation, rather they tend to increase

oxygenation in the heart and arteries.

There are specific studies confirming this.

 

Regards,

JoAnn

 

In Gettingwell , Pipetman9@a... wrote:

>

>

> Hello JoAnn,

> one cup of your butter replacer contains 1/2 cup of flax oil and

flax oil

> consists of about 70% polyunsaturated fatty acids i.e. about 60%

omega 3

> linolenic + about 10 % omega 6 linolic acid) acid, the rest is

about 20%

> monounsaturated fatty acids and about 10% saturated fatty acids.

> best regards, Juergen Boehm

>

> > This was the recommendation! This will speed up lipid

> > peroxidation? Excuse me? There are no polyunsaturated fats in

this

> > recipe...

> >

> > Butter Replacer

> >

> > 1/2 cup cold pressed flax oil

> >

> > 1 tablespoon powdered lecithin

> >

> > 1/2 cup nutritional yeast

> >

> > salt to taste

> >

> > Mix and chill.

>

>

>

>

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