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Health risk from veg oil
7 November 2015, 22:54, (This post was last modified: 7 November 2015, 22:56 by NorthernRaider.)
#1
Health risk from veg oil
I saw a very good program on TV a wek or say where proper experts were analysing the use of certain veg oils for cooking and in the show they actually raised this concern. That is oils we use cold on salads etc are fine, but they found out that when heated to cook say chips or spuds a chemical reaction takes place that makes what people thought were safer alternatives to Lard & Fat were actually far more dangerous.

I don't think this is one of the USUAL XXXX is bad for you and will kill you type scares, I think it is the experts acknowledging that they have got previous advice WRONG.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/n...perts.html

Cooking with vegetable oils releases toxic chemicals linked to cancer and other diseases, according to leading scientists, who are now recommending food be fried in olive oil, coconut oil, butter or even lard.

The results of a series of experiments threaten to turn on its head official advice that oils rich in polyunsaturated fats – such as corn oil and sunflower oil – are better for the health than the saturated fats in animal products.

Scientists found that heating up vegetable oils led to the release of high concentrations of chemicals called aldehydes, which have been linked to illnesses including cancer, heart disease and dementia.

Martin Grootveld, a professor of bioanalytical chemistry and chemical pathology, said that his research showed “a typical meal of fish and chips”, fried in vegetable oil, contained as much as 100 to 200 times more toxic aldehydes than the safe daily limit set by the World Health Organisation.

“The human brain is changing in a way that is as serious as climate change threatens to be"

Professor John Stein, Oxford University’s emeritus professor of neuroscience

In contrast, heating up butter, olive oil and lard in tests produced much lower levels of aldehydes. Coconut oil produced the lowest levels of the harmful chemicals.

Concerns over toxic chemicals in heated oils are backed up by separate research from a University of Oxford professor, who claims that the fatty acids in vegetable oils are contributing to other health problems.

Professor John Stein, Oxford’s emeritus professor of neuroscience, said that partly as a result of corn and sunflower oils, “the human brain is changing in a way that is as serious as climate change threatens to be”.

Because vegetable oils are rich in omega 6 acids, they are contributing to a reduction in critical omega 3 fatty acids in the brain by replacing them, he believes.

“If you eat too much corn oil or sunflower oil, the brain is absorbing too much omega 6, and that effectively forces out omega 3,” said Prof Stein. “I believe the lack of omega 3 is a powerful contributory factor to such problems as increasing mental health issues and other problems such as dyslexia.”


He said sunflower oil and corn oil were now banished from his own kitchen, replaced by olive oil and butter.

NHS advice is to replace “foods high in saturated fat with lower-fat versions” and warns against frying food in butter or lard, recommending instead corn oil, sunflower oil and rapeseed oil. Saturated fats raise cholesterol levels, increasing the risk of heart disease.

But Prof Grootveld, of De Montfort University in Leicester, who carried out a series of experiments, said: “For decades, the authorities have been warning us how bad butter and lard was. But we have found butter is very, very good for frying purposes and so is lard.

“People have been telling us how healthy polyunsaturates are in corn oil and sunflower oil. But when you start messing around with them, subjecting them to high amounts of energy in the frying pan or the oven, they undergo a complex series of chemical reactions which results in the accumulation of large amounts of toxic compounds.”

The findings are contained in research papers. Prof Grootveld’s team measured levels of “aldehydic lipid oxidation products” (LOPs), produced when oils were heated to varying temperatures. The tests suggested coconut oil produces the lowest levels of aldehydes, and three times more aldehydes were produced when heating corn oil and sunflower oil than butter.

The team concluded in one paper last year: “The most obvious solution to the generation of LOPs in culinary oils during frying is to avoid consuming foods fried in PUFA [polyunsaturated fatty acid]-rich oils as much as possible.”

Prof Grootveld said: “This major problem has received scant or limited attention from the food industry and health researchers.” Evidence of high levels of toxicity from heating oils has been available for many years, he said.

Health concerns linked to the toxic by-products include heart disease; cancer; “malformations” during pregnancy; inflammation; risk of ulcers and a rise in blood pressure.

He said the oils when “completely pure [and] authentic … offer no threats to human health” but that “LOPs arising from the frequent and common use of polyunsaturated fats” for frying “certainly do so”.

Public Health England says saturated fats, including butter and coconut oil “can be eaten occasionally in small amounts as part of a healthy balanced diet”.

Sorry for the typos, this laptop is only one year old and falling apart already, half its systems wont work and much of the keyboard only functions when it feels like it, I have to use wifes PC to get IE 11 or Google as it simply wont work any more.

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7 November 2015, 23:10,
#2
RE: Health risk from veg oil
(7 November 2015, 22:54)NorthernRaider Wrote: I saw a very good program on TV ...........

Yes I saw it as well, it was the BBC "Eat Well for Less" Programme.
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7 November 2015, 23:16,
#3
RE: Health risk from veg oil
Ta muchly for that, I couldn't remember its name but by gum it made me sit up and pay attention.

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8 November 2015, 21:56,
#4
RE: Health risk from veg oil
The DMs take on this story
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/articl...earch.html

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9 November 2015, 00:12,
#5
RE: Health risk from veg oil
good info here thanks.
toast n drippin with black pepper yum yum
Survive the jive (youtube )
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