A healthy percentage of high-quality fat in a meal satisfies and leaves feelings of energy, fulfillment and warmth. When there are excess fats and oils in the diet, especially heavily processed fats, symptoms can include weight gain, skin breakouts, high blood pressure, liver strain and an overall feeling of mental, physical and emotional heaviness. Signs of insufficient high-quality fats are brittle hair and nails, dry skin, hunger after meals and feeling cold.
There are many sources of healthy fats and oils. Oils higher in saturated fat such as high quality butter, ghee (clarified butter) or coconut oil hold better at high temperatures. When sautéing and stovetop cooking at moderate temperatures, try organic extra virgin olive oil. Any vegetable oil is best when unrefined. Oils like flaxseed, sesame, walnut and pumpkin seed are best used unheated. Try using less oil with cooking and then add it unheated in sauces or dressings, on top of salads, veggies or grains. Other healthy fats are found in whole nuts and seeds and in their butters like almond butter or tahini. Whole foods such as avocados, olives and coconuts are great sources of healthy fat, along with wild salmon and omega-3 and omega-6 organic eggs. Experiment with these healthy fat sources and see which agree with you and leave you satisfied.
Choose UNREFINED oils.
When selecting oils, buy the highest quality organic products you can afford, since cooking oils are the backbone of so many dishes. Good words to look for on the label are organic, first-pressed, cold-pressed, extra-virgin and unrefined. Words to avoid are expeller-pressed, refined and solvent extracted.
Oil is sensitive to light and heat so those that come in plastic clear bottles are usually oils of a lower quality.
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