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Fats, Hydrogenation, Margarine JoAnn Guest Mar 15, 2005 13:37 PST

http://www.thenhf.com/articles_78.htm

 

Provided by Zeus Information Service

February 13, 2005

 

Come forth into the light of things; let nature be your teacher. -

Wordsworth.

 

The hydrogenation plants of our modern food industry may turn out to

have contributed to the causation of a major disease.

 

- Leading article Lancet 1956 Vol 2 page 557

 

Our way of life should not be so much our way of death.

 

- Edward Faukner

 

A fat is distinguished from oil by its physical consistency. At room

temperature, if solid, it is considered a fat; if liquid, an oil. In the

natural state, however, either fat or oil can gradually revert to liquid

or solid by having the temperature raised or lowered.

 

The characteristic solidity or liquidity depends, generally, on the

degree of saturation of the fatty acids. The more solid they are, the

higher the saturation; the fluid oils are nearly all unsaturated to some

degree.

 

In general, vegetable and fish oils are highly unsaturated; animal fats

are highly saturated. There are exceptions.

 

For example coconut oil, a vegetable fat is highly saturated. The

unsaturates contain highly desirable “ essential fatty acids “ (EFA)

vital for bodily function and good health.

(These fatty acids are linoleic, linolenic and arachidonic)

 

A French chemist, Paul Sabatier, Dean of the faculty of science at the

University of Toulouse, was noted for his tremendous work and research

in catalysis. In 1912, along with Victor Grignard, he was awarded the

Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his method of hydrogenating organic

compounds in the presence of finely divided metals.

 

The process originally had been intended for use in soap manufacture.

 

By saturation, liquid oils are converted into plastic solid fats.

American chemists adapted the process for food fats.

 

How is the liquid oil or soft fat hardened? It is exposed to high

temperature and placed under pressure. Hydrogen is then bubbled through

the oil in the presence of nickel, platinum or some other catalyst. The

Hydrogen atoms combine with the carbon atoms, and the product becomes

saturated or hardened.

 

The new compound bears no relationship to the original oil. It is dark,

malodorous grease.

 

It is then bleached with corrosive chemicals to finish the change from

an organic to an inorganic substance; from a live to a dead concoction.

 

Technologists’ skills are used to bleach, filter and deodorize it into a

pure white, odourless, tasteless, highly artificial fat.

 

It may be processed further for making shortening, lard or margarine.

 

The heating of the oil ruins its original character, with destruction of

all vitamins and mineral factors as well as an alteration of proteins.

 

The essential fatty acids (EFA) are destroyed, or changed into abnormal

toxic fatty acids antagonistic to EFA.

 

The synthetic fat forms new molecular structures unacceptable to the

human physiology.

 

Dr. Hugh Sinclair at the laboratory of Human Nutrition, Oxford

University, has found that lack of EFA

 

“ Is a contributory cause in neurological diseases, heart diseases,

arteriosclerosis, skin disease, various degenerative conditions such as

cataract and arthritis and cancer.

 

- Drug Trade News July 1 1957

 

 

 

Doctors - good, respectable, intelligent, capable medical men and men of

unimpeachable integrity – recommend and advise that their patients who

are in danger of or have had heart troubles, give up the use of Butter

and instead use margarine. May God in his mercy have pity on the medical

men who are giving this advice to their patients - and even more so on

their patients.

 

- John H. Tobe “Margarine (The Plastic Fat and your Heart Attack 1962) "

 

 

 

 

 

When I first discovered that Nickel was used in practically all

processes of hydrogenation, I wondered.

 

Then upon further study, I found that only finely pulverised nickel was

used … Then I found it clearly admitted in a book entitled “ Industrial

Chemistry” that all of the nickel can never be filtered out no matter

how hard they try.

 

A quote from this book: “ The commercial procedure is to suspend finely

divided nickel in the oil heated to 250 degrees to 300 degrees F. (121

to 149 degrees C) and blow in Hydrogen gas… The nickel is used in

amounts of 0.5 to 1 percent of the weight of the oil.”

 

It is bad enough that with every mouthful of hydrogenated fat you also

get a quantity of nickel, but I checked deeper and to my utter amazement

I found that the products used by the industry at large was a substance

called raney nickel.

 

Very few people know, but the Merck’s Index reveals that “ Raney Nickel

catalyst is prepared by fusing 50 parts of nickel with 50 parts of

Aluminium, for use as catalyst for the hydrogenation of organic

compounds with the gaseous hydrogen. Usually from 1 to 10% of the

substance to be reduced is employed.”

 

In “Industrial Chemistry” They state that 0.5 to 1 % catalyst is used.

Merck’s Index reads that from 1-10 % is used.

 

- John H. Tobe

 

 

 

 

There is no assurance that nickel, if used, as the catalyst leaves no

residue in the product. This element, even in minute quantities in the

diet, is suspected of being a carcinogen.

 

In addition, the role of “ abnormal “ metals such as nickel has been

studied in relation to arteriosclerosis.

 

One metal can replace another and inactive it in a biologic system, so

that there is a possibility that the nickel competes with an essential

metal of the enzyme system of the body and produces a Vitamin B6

(Pyridoxine) deficiency.

 

This Vitamin plays an important role in converting saturates to

unsaturated in the body.

 

- Henry A Schroeder M.D. (Journal of Chronic Diseases July 1955)

 

 

 

 

Margarine, in addition to its hydrogenation, has other objectionable

features that make it an artificial product. It is a water and oil

emulsion, with chemicals added to maintain its stability and give it

other properties.

 

An artificial butterlike flavour and odour are achieved with dactyl. To

insure enjoyment of these qualities, isopropyl or sterol citrates are

added. These additives are euphemistically labelled “ flavour protectors

“.

 

Additional attempts to achieve butter like qualities are made with

artificial colour, lecithin to imitate the frying behaviour of butter

and synthetic Vitamins to enrich the product.”

 

Sodium benzoate, benzoic acid or citric acid may be added as

preservatives.

 

The benzoates are known poisons, with severe reactions in sensitive

individuals, resulting occasionally in death. In addition to these

items, emulsifiers (monoglycerides, triglycerides and others) may be

present.

 

By 1958, in the U.S. margarine outsold butters by more that 100 million

pounds yearly. But the real bonanza came when the industry began to

exploit the public interest in polyunsaturated.

 

The campaign was labelled as” one of the the most unprincipled food

promotions… in the past quarter of a century”, with TV commercials “

noisy, ubiquitous and shameless.”

 

Sir John Mc Michael, Emeritus Professor of Medicine at the University of

London says (Quote from the Star July 27 1977) “ many doctors have

allowed themselves to be brainwashed by propaganda into a widespread

acceptance of a dietary fashion for polyunsaturated fats which could

only be transient.

 

Sir John accused Professor A.G. Shaper of ignoring modern scientific

appraisal and trials. Evidence quoted by Sir John:

 

A British trial on 600 patients, at risk of coronary heart disease, on

low fat and polyunsaturated diets, clearly showed no effect on

coronaries or death rates.

 

 

Cholesterol-lowering drugs were tried out on more than 8000 patients in

the United states with no benefit

 

 

A Mayo clinic study showed the extent and severity of coronary disease

is unrelated to high or low cholesterol.

 

Dr. Keith Ball of the Central Middlesex Hospital in London accused Sir

John of ignoring cast changes in diets over recent years. Consumption of

unrefined carbohydrates had fallen and that of fat increased. More and

more “Junk Food” high in saturated fats and additives, and far less

natural and unprocessed foods had been eaten.

 

Sir John in reply said Professor Jens Didichen of Oslo introduced

low-fat diets in Norway

25 years ago after which " soy bean oil " consumption increased five fold

– now confessed there had been a steady increase of coronary heart

disease in Norway.

 

He regrets the anxiety created by his advice to the population but

admits: “ It has become increasingly clear that we are on the wrong

track.”

 

Yet it must be a brave man who disregards the anti-cholesterol advice of

so many eminent authorities. They may just prove to be right.

 

- The STAR July 27, 1977

- (Marais Malan Science Editor)

 

 

 

 

 

The margarine manufacturers have advertised their wares as containing

unsaturated. Significant quantities are unlikely, regardless of raw

materials used, because of the hydrogenation of the product.

 

Many claims fail to tell the whole story, and typify what advertising

agencies call “avoidance of negative appeal.” Slogans have been devised

that “ a little inaccuracy saves a world of explanation”

 

Another artful device is to label margarine and other factory foods as “

partially hydrogenated “ or “partially hardened” with the word ”

hydrogenated “ or hardened used interchangeably.

 

A product is either hydrogenated or not hydrogenated:

 

any degree of hydrogenation is not in the best health interests.

 

Advertising copywriters for margarine have shifted from direct to

indirect health claims.

 

References to heart disease or doctors prescriptions are made less

frequently.

 

Instead these have been superseded by phrases like:

 

“ High in unsaturates” or “low in saturated fats”.

 

It is well to remember the observation of Dr. Bicknell in World War II

in Norway, where margarine factories had been destroyed, arterial

diseases decreased.

 

In England, during the same period, with margarine factories intact,

arterial diseases increased.

 

He commented:

 

“ Our increasing arterial degeneration is a preventable pandemic disease

of modern foods and especially of modern bread, milk and margarine?

 

- Franklin Bicknell M.D. (1960)

 

 

 

 

Despite the shocking implications of hydrogenation, the process is used

almost universally by food processors. Far worse, it is accepted and

fully sanctioned by Government agencies responsible for the consumer’s

welfare.

 

It is difficult if not virtually impossible, to avoid hydrogenated fats,

commonly used in restaurants, bakeries and hundreds of consumer food

products and packaged dehydrated soups.

 

Chocolates, sweets, caramels, bread, cakes cookies, biscuits, puddings,

pies, jelly rolls, Danish pastries, pretzels packaged popcorns, peanut

butter, desert toppings, pastry mixes, cake mixes, sauces, baker’s

fillings, Ice cream coatings, many or most packaged foods especially

those with long shelf lives, processed meats, most packaged fats such as

shortening and especially margarine,

raisins, prunes, nuts and many other foods covered with hydrogenated

fats.

 

These hydrogenated oils are the greatest villains of all because you

find them in the most unsuspected places,

 

In the light of the present knowledge, official acceptance of

hydrogenation is unpardonable.

 

- Beatrice Trum Hunter

 

 

 

 

The death of my people is a silent accusation; it is a crime conceived

by the heads of the unseen serpents… It is a song less and senseless

tragedy….

 

- Kahlil Gibran (Dead are my People)

 

 

 

 

It appears to me necessary that every physician to be skilled in nature

and to strive to know, if he would wish to perform his duties, what a

man is in relation to the articles of food and drink, and to his other

occupations, and what are the effects of each of them to every one..

 

Whoever does not know what effect these things produce upon man cannot

know the consequences, which result from them.

 

Who ever pays no attention to these things, or paying attention does not

comprehend them, how can he understand the diseases, which befall man?

For, by every one of these things a man is affected and changed this way

and that. And the whole of his life is subjected to them, whether in

health, convalescence or disease. Nothing else, then, can be more

important or more necessary to know than these things.

 

- Hippocrates

 

 

 

 

We are natural beings and are trying to live in an artificial world. It

cannot be done. There are certain fixed points in our problem, which

limit our action; we may not ignore them or disaster happens.

 

The effects of action taken in their defiance, sometimes, in the early

stages, supervene so slowly that the approaching disaster and its cause

are not seen or not accepted.

 

- Dr. Lionel James Picton

_________________

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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