Best Oil For Healthy Cooking
Relative to other oils, canola (made from the seeds of a
yellow-flowered plant) and olive oils are rich in monounsaturated
fats—the kind that help reduce “unhealthy” LDL cholesterol and boost
“healthy” HDL cholesterol. But new research suggests that virgin (and
extra-virgin) olive oils—those produced purely by mechanically pressing
the oil from olives, with no chemical processing—have an edge:
antioxidants called polyphenols. Naturally found in olives (in red wine
and green tea too), polyphenols mop up free radicals before they can
oxidize LDL (oxidation makes LDL even more damaging to arteries).
In a three-week study of 200 men published recently in Annals of
Internal Medicine, those who consumed just under two tablespoons a day
of high-polyphenol virgin olive oil in place of other dietary fats
registered larger increases in “good” HDL cholesterol and fewer markers
of oxidative stress than men who consumed the same amount of “ordinary”
olive oil, which had a very low polyphenol content. Chemical refining
processes remove some polyphenols from “ordinary” olive oils (often
labeled as “pure” in the U.S.) and other cooking oils, says Maria-Isabel
Covas, Ph.D., lead author of the study and a researcher at the
Municipal Institute for Medical Research in Barcelona, Spain.
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