Real butter vs. Margarine? Which is healthier?

carlxo21
carlxo21 Posts: 143 Member
edited September 30 in Food and Nutrition
I know margarine is lower cal. But I heard there are chemicals and preservatives in it that are NOT good for you.

Anybody know about this?
Is there such thing as a good choice for butter? My ideal would be REAL butter that is light/lower calorie and not full of chemicals.
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Replies

  • Kelly_Wilson1990
    Kelly_Wilson1990 Posts: 3,245 Member
    butter
  • I don't know if its healthier or not, but I switched to real butter a few years ago after learning that vegetable oils can cause acne. Plus, I like the richness that real butter adds to a dish, even if its just a little.
  • I use brummel and brown yogurt spread! It's low cal and relatively healthy compared to other options
  • CakeFit21
    CakeFit21 Posts: 2,521 Member
    REAL BUTTER!
  • wickedcricket
    wickedcricket Posts: 1,246 Member
    I NEVER use margarine. Butter came first and tastes best. of course, I use it sparingly but I never use margarine and I never use 'processed cheese food' - I TRY as much as I can to use REAL ingredients. I believe it tastes better & I almost always get compliments on my food.
    ps I never eat 'chocolate flavor' either -- real chocolate or nothing for me - why waste calories?
  • Bellum24
    Bellum24 Posts: 106 Member
    I believe it all depends in what you are trying to do lose weight or get healthy, yes they seem like the same thing but a lot of low fat foods are full of chemicals, I like to use more natural products in moderation for the best results
  • jbinga
    jbinga Posts: 38 Member
    BUTTER!
  • alohabrie
    alohabrie Posts: 204
    In moderation - spreadable butter with oiive oil is a good choice.
  • CavewomanCoby
    CavewomanCoby Posts: 253 Member
    100% real butter.... margarine scares me.
  • CakeFit21
    CakeFit21 Posts: 2,521 Member
    100% real butter.... margarine scares me.

    Yes, why is it so yellow?
  • Bellum24
    Bellum24 Posts: 106 Member
    100% real butter.... margarine scares me.

    Yes, why is it so yellow?

    Why does it get all oily when it sits out "sometimes" hahhaa
  • Misiaxcore
    Misiaxcore Posts: 659 Member
    Butter. It's natural after all. Margarine is just chemicals so the body has a harder time in dealing with them. At least that's how I see it =]
  • svgarcia
    svgarcia Posts: 592 Member
    Oh my. I better stop buying cheap margarine...
  • milaxx
    milaxx Posts: 1,122 Member
    real food is always going to be better than fake food in my book. I rarely use butter, but I wouldn't touch margarine with a 10ft pole
  • hbunting86
    hbunting86 Posts: 952 Member
    I buy olive oil spread, or avocado spread :)
  • MicheleBartlett
    MicheleBartlett Posts: 2 Member
    A dietician told me to cream together (use a blender or mixer) softened butter and olive oil, 1/2 cup of each. Not only does the butter stay soft in the fridge, it's better for you than margarine.
  • scapez
    scapez Posts: 2,018 Member
    Butter. HANDS DOWN! I only have it now when I can afford the extra calories. Good thing I'm pretty disciplined now because I love me some butter!
  • Jefster
    Jefster Posts: 48 Member
    Margarine known as Oleo used to be "White" and include yellow "coloring" packets to mix in, to give it that "butter like" color.

    From WikiPedia:

    "Margarine naturally appears white, or almost white, and by forbidding the addition of artificial coloring agents, legislators in some jurisdictions found that they could protect their dairy industries by discouraging the consumption of margarine. Bans on adding color became commonplace in the U.S., Australasia and Canada and, in some cases, those bans endured for almost 100 years. It did not become legal to sell colored margarine in Australia, for example, until the 1960s."

    As early as 1877, the first United States (U.S.) states had passed laws to restrict the sale and labeling of margarine. By the mid-1880s, the U.S. federal government had introduced a tax of two cents per pound, and manufacturers needed an expensive license to make or sell the product. Individual states began to require the clear labeling of margarine. The color bans, drafted by the butter lobby, began in the dairy states of New York and New Jersey. In several states, legislatures enacted laws to require margarine manufacturers to add pink colorings to make the product look unpalatable,[9] but the Supreme Court struck down New Hampshire's law and overruled these measures in Collins v. New Hampshire, 171 U.S. 30 (1898).

    By the start of the 20th century, eight out of ten Americans could not buy yellow margarine, and those that could had to pay a hefty tax on it. Bootleg colored margarine became common, and manufacturers began to supply food-coloring capsules so that the consumer could knead the yellow color into margarine before serving it. Nevertheless, the regulations and taxes had a significant effect: the 1902 restrictions on margarine color, for example, cut annual U.S. consumption from 120 million to 48 million pounds (60,000 to 24,000 tons). However, by the end of the 1910s, it had become more popular than ever[citation needed].


    Stick with butter. Your body needs the animal fats, I prefer European style butter as well.

    Brummel and Brown is delicious though :)
  • Pebble321
    Pebble321 Posts: 6,423 Member
    I'd rather eat real butter every now and again than margarine. I don't have either very often.

    If you find a "light" version of butter or margarine - check the ingredients list. You might find that it has lots of extra additions that you'd rather not eat, or that it has been whipped up with water so it spreads further (but makes your toast soggy).
  • I can't beleive its not butter LIGHT
  • javablondie
    javablondie Posts: 411 Member
    butter.
  • Butter, definitely. I always have pounds of it in the freezer, wrapped in foil and dated, acquired when on sale during the baking months. For day-to-day use, I've been using the BestLife spread that one of Oprah's army is always plugging, not because he's Oprah's boy but because it was free with coupon and, more importantly, I recognize everything on the ingredient list.
  • aqua_zumba_fan
    aqua_zumba_fan Posts: 383 Member
    Oh my. I better stop buying cheap margarine...

    Me too! I just automatically assumed margarine was way better, but hadn't thought about what it's made from - oops! Not that I use much anyway. We have very cheap butter in the fridge but just for bread making.
  • poseyj88
    poseyj88 Posts: 140 Member
    A dietician told me to cream together (use a blender or mixer) softened butter and olive oil, 1/2 cup of each. Not only does the butter stay soft in the fridge, it's better for you than margarine.

    This. Love.
  • Mmmary212
    Mmmary212 Posts: 410 Member
    Butter and lots of it. If you can make it yourself, it's going to be better for you. Margarine=awful stuff.
  • OnlyGodCan
    OnlyGodCan Posts: 91 Member
    Summary of the eRumor:
    A list of comparative facts about margarine and butter.

    The Truth:

    The heart of this eRumor, the comparison between butter and Margarine, has been circulating since 2005. Later versions added the tidbit about Margarine being manufactured to fatten turkeys.

    We'll go through the email one fact at time but it needs to be kept in mind that not every Margarine product is the same. There are other spreads that are loosely called Margarine but may, for example, be part vegetable oil or a fat-free Margarine product.

    1. Margarine was originally manufactured to fatten turkeys. When it killed The turkeys, the people who had put all the money into the research wanted a Payback so they put their heads together to figure out what to do with this Product to get their money back. It was a white substance with no food Appeal so they added the yellow coloring and sold it to people to use in Place of butter. How do you like it? They have come out with some clever New flavorings-Fiction!
    According to the National Association of Margarine Manufacturers, Margarine was the idea of a Frenchman named Hippolyte Mege-Mouriez in response to a request from Emperor Louis Napoleon for ideas for a substitute for butter. In 1870 he used margaric acid and the name of his formulation became known as Margarine. It became a hit in the United States in the late 1800's.

    2. Both have the same amount of calories-Truth!
    A tablespoon of butter is 100 calories. A tablespoon of Margarine is 100 calories.

    3. Eating margarine can increase heart disease in women by 53% over eating the same amount of butter, according to a recent Harvard Medical Study-Truth! But Updated!
    We didn't find the "53%" study, but Harvard School of Public Health has published a report on this. It says that more than 30 years ago research indicated that saturated fat (such as in butter) was bad for the heart and people were told to switch to margarine. A Harvard study of women between 1980 and 1994 found a significant reduction of heart disease risk by reducing smoking, hormone treatment, and dietary improvements including reducing or eliminating saturated fat (such as in butter.) Further research has shown, however, that some margarines contained trans fat, which was even worse for the heart than saturated fat. The report cautions us not to make decisions as a result of just one study but to consider the body of recent research about an issue like butter versus margarine.
    4. Butter is slightly higher in saturated fats at 8 grams compared to 5 Grams-Truth!
    A tablespoon of butter is 7g of saturated fat. A tablespoon of margarine is 2g of saturated fat.

    5. Eating butter increases the absorption of many other nutrients in other Foods-Unproven!
    We could not find anything definitive about this.

    6. Butter has many nutritional benefits where margarine has a few only because they are added!
    It depends on what you are measuring. The advantage of butter is that it is a more natural product than margarine and does have more vitamin content. But butter is high in saturated fat, which is associated with increased heart attack risk. Saturated fats are the ones that are solid at room temperature and increase the "bad" cholesterol (LDL) as well as the "good" cholesterol (HDL). The disadvantage of true margarine is the trans fat level. The more solid a margarine is at room temperature, the more trans fat it contains, as much as 3 grams per tablespoon. Margarine makers have responded to that by releasing tub or liquid products that have either reduced or eliminated trans fats. Watch for the labels. Heart doctors recommend butter over normal margarine but recommend trans fat free margarines over butter. It all gets very confusing. There are even margarine products now that say they actually lower cholesterol.

    7. Butter tastes much better than margarine and it can enhance the flavors of other foods-A Matter of Personal Taste!

    8. Butter has been around for centuries where margarine has been around for Less than 100 years-Truth!

    9. Margarine is high in trans fatty acids-Truth!

    10. Margarine triples the risk of coronary heart disease-Unproven!
    Although trans fats are to be avoided, we did not find any research that says that the use of margarine triples the risk of heart disease.

    11. Margarine ncreases total cholesterol and LDL (this is the bad cholesterol) and lowers HDL cholesterol, (the good cholesterol)-Truth!

    12. Increases the risk of cancers up to five fold-Fiction!
    We could not find any substantiation of this claim.

    13. Margarine lowers quality of breast milk-Truth!
    We didn't find any research on this but there are studies on how a mother's eating of trans fats affects the level of trans fats in her milk. One study, for example, comparing Canadian breast milk to Chinese breast milk found that Canadian mothers had 33 more trans fats in their milk than the Chinese mothers. So the quality of the breast milk can be affected by the consumption of trans fats.

    14. Margarine decreases immune response-Truth!
    We found several references to this including an article by nutritionist Dr. Mary Enig that said that consuming trans fatty acids "Affects immune response by lowering effeciency of B cell response and increasing proliferation of T cells."

    15. Decreases insulin response-Truth!
    Actually the trans fat can increase blood insulin levels, which increases the risk for diabetes.

    16. Margarine is but ONE MOLECULE away from being PLASTIC-Fiction!
    We found no support for this. Perhaps whoever wrote this heard a discussion about the "plasticity" of margarine. It is "plastic" at room temperature meaning that the shape of it can be changed when pressure is applied. That doesn't mean it is composed of what we normally think of as plastic. It was originally made of animal fats but increasingly now is made from vegetable oils.

    Updated 3/29/07


    A real example of the eRumor as it has appeared on the Internet:

    Margarine was originally manufactured to fatten
    turkeys. When it killed The turkeys, the people who had put all the money into the research wanted a Payback so they put their heads together to figure out what to do with this Product to get their money back. It was a white substance with no food Appeal so they added the yellow coloring and sold it to people to use in Place of butter. How do you like it? They have come out with some clever New flavorings.

    DO YOU KNOW... The difference between margarine and
    butter?

    ; Read on to the end...gets very interesting!

    Both have the same amount of calories.



    Eating margarine can increase heart disease in women
    by Butter is slightly higher in saturated fats at 8
    grams compared to 5
    Grams.
    53% over eating the same amount of butter, according
    to a recent Harvard
    Medical Study.

    Eating butter increases the absorption of many other
    nutrients in other
    Foods.

    Butter has many nutritional benefits where margarine
    has a few only
    Because they are added!

    Butter tastes much better than margarine and it can
    enhance the flavors
    Of other foods.

    Butter has been around for centuries where margarine
    has been around for
    Less than 100 years.

    And now, for Margarine..

    Very high in Trans fatty acids.

    Triple risk of coronary heart disease.

    Increases t otal cholesterol and LDL (this is the
    bad cholesterol) and
    Lowers HDL cholesterol, (the good cholesterol)

    Increases the risk of cancers up to five fold.

    Lowers quality of breast milk.

    Decreases immune response.

    Decreases insulin response.

    And here's the most disturbing fact.... HERE IS THE
    PART THAT IS VERY
    INTERESTING!

    Margarine is but ONE MOLECULE away from being
    PLASTIC..

    This fact alone was enough to have me avoiding
    margarine for life and
    Anything else that is hydrogenated (this means hydrogen is added, changing The molecular structure of the substance).

    You can try this yourself:

    Purchase a tub of margarine and leave it in your
    garage or shaded area.
    Within a couple of days you will note a couple of
    things:

    * no flies, not even those pesky fruit flies will go
    near it (that
    Should tell you something)

    * it does not rot or smell differently because it
    has no nutritional
    Value; nothing will grow on it Even those teeny
    weeny microorganisms will
    Not a find a home to grow. Why? Because it is nearly plastic. Would you Melt your Tupperware and spread that on your toast?

    Share This With Your Friends.....(If you want to
    "butter them up")!

    Chinese Proverb: "When someone shares something of
    value with you and
    You benefit from it, you have a moral obligation to share it with others."
  • sweettthings
    sweettthings Posts: 157 Member
    Butter! That and olive and coconut oils are the only fats I use. Eat real food.
  • ajbeans
    ajbeans Posts: 2,857 Member
    IMO, butter is healthier because it's more natural. However, it doesn't spread easily on my toast, so I use margarine for things like that, and butter for cooking.
  • ajbeans
    ajbeans Posts: 2,857 Member
    A dietician told me to cream together (use a blender or mixer) softened butter and olive oil, 1/2 cup of each. Not only does the butter stay soft in the fridge, it's better for you than margarine.

    Oh! This solves the problem I was just complaining about in my last post! Gonna try it sometime .Thanks!
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