Fats?!?
UsedToBeHusky
Posts: 15,228 Member
Okay. So I never paid much attention to this particular macro before. I knew there were good fats and bad fats, but I really didn't pay too much attention to which ones ended up in my body. Most of the time I am way under in fat. I recently read NROFLW. I have yet to start the lifting part of the program because I want to get the nutrition part in line first. When reading the book, I realized that ignoring my fats might be what has been hindering my weight loss as of late. Unfortunately, I have no desire to take fish oil.
So... school me on the good fats. How does fats affect hormones? What are the best dietary sources of good fats? Are there supplements available other than fish oil?
So... school me on the good fats. How does fats affect hormones? What are the best dietary sources of good fats? Are there supplements available other than fish oil?
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Replies
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The only bad fats are trans fats and to a lesser degree refined vegetable oils. Context and dosage needs to be applied for any real life examples where these and any fat could be detrimental. All natural occurring dietary fats I would classify as good fats.0
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peanut butter, almonds, walnuts ect. fish, olive oil, honestly....just take the fish oil theres no reason not to "i dont like it" is kindof preschool status to be honest, not trying to offend just sayin, people who have the most success often do things we dont like doing, I eat things that make me gag but Ill chase it with water just cuz I know its important for me to get them.0
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peanut butter, almonds, walnuts ect. fish, olive oil, honestly....just take the fish oil theres no reason not to "i dont like it" is kindof preschool status to be honest, not trying to offend just sayin, people who have the most success often do things we dont like doing, I eat things that make me gag but Ill chase it with water just cuz I know its important for me to get them.
Why can't I just do it the old fashioned way? I would rather at least attempt to meet those needs through diet before resorting to supplements.0 -
I googled and found this link that has a chart of the healthy mono and poly unsaturated fats. HTH: http://www.helpguide.org/life/healthy_diet_fats.htm0
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peanut butter, almonds, walnuts ect. fish, olive oil, honestly....just take the fish oil theres no reason not to "i dont like it" is kindof preschool status to be honest, not trying to offend just sayin, people who have the most success often do things we dont like doing, I eat things that make me gag but Ill chase it with water just cuz I know its important for me to get them.
Why can't I just do it the old fashioned way? I would rather at least attempt to meet those needs through diet before resorting to supplements.0 -
Nuts, natural nut butters, avocado, oils like olive, rice bran, avocado, fish - especially salmon.0
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OK basically, and this is very basic....
good fats - unsaturated fats (poly and mono) - come from vegetables (except canola, coconut oil and palm oil as they can easily become rancid at room temperature)
unsaturated fats help lower cholesterol - olive oil is a great choice to help with this and also helps with healthy heart
bad fats (which aren't really bad unless you eat heaps of it) are saturated and come from animals.
really bad fats are trans fats - deep fried and highly processed foods
Omega 3 is essential for healthy heart - if you don't like the thought of fish oil pills (they really don't taste at all) you can eat at least 2 serves a week of trout or salmon, catfish, makerel, or eat a lot of flaxseed (not whole - must be cracked to be effective).
so basically, be like the Mediterraneans and use a lot of olive oil with a little animal fat, along with a lot of fish and then you will have a healthy heart, low cholesterol and thin waist line.
hope this helps.0 -
i try to stick to the paleo theory: half plate lean meat, half veggies, and a dollop of fat. good fats: avocado/avocado oils, bacon fat, butter, chicken fat, duck fat. and these "good fat" examples come from paleo guide "balanced bites", so no i'm not making it up that bacon fat is good for your progress.0
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I googled and found this link that has a chart of the healthy mono and poly unsaturated fats. HTH: http://www.helpguide.org/life/healthy_diet_fats.htm
This helps a lot. Thank you.
I was already eating mostly healhty sources of fat. I just have to figure out how to work more of them in.0 -
OK basically, and this is very basic....
good fats - unsaturated fats (poly and mono) - come from vegetables (except canola, coconut oil and palm oil as they can easily become rancid at room temperature)
unsaturated fats help lower cholesterol - olive oil is a great choice to help with this and also helps with healthy heart
bad fats (which aren't really bad unless you eat heaps of it) are saturated and come from animals.
really bad fats are trans fats - deep fried and highly processed foods
Omega 3 is essential for healthy heart - if you don't like the thought of fish oil pills (they really don't taste at all) you can eat at least 2 serves a week of trout or salmon, catfish, makerel, or eat a lot of flaxseed (not whole - must be cracked to be effective).
so basically, be like the Mediterraneans and use a lot of olive oil with a little animal fat, along with a lot of fish and then you will have a healthy heart, low cholesterol and thin waist line.
hope this helps.
I second this ^0 -
If you want omega-3s without doing a supplement go for oily fish (tuna, salmon, sardines), grass fed beef, eggs from chickens that are eating flax.
I eat the following foods for good fats: avocados, pastured meats, grassfed butter, whole milk, grassfed yogurt, coconut oil, eggs, olive oil, oily fish, some nuts (I'm allergic to some nuts), and other things I can't think of right now
Oils and fats I avoid: trans-fat (obviously), canola oil, vegetable oil, peanut oil, margarine, most oils from seeds and soy in general. They tend to go rancid very quickly and are high in polyunsaturated fats, which can promote inflammation.0 -
peanut butter, almonds, walnuts ect. fish, olive oil, honestly....just take the fish oil theres no reason not to "i dont like it" is kindof preschool status to be honest, not trying to offend just sayin, people who have the most success often do things we dont like doing, I eat things that make me gag but Ill chase it with water just cuz I know its important for me to get them.
Why can't I just do it the old fashioned way? I would rather at least attempt to meet those needs through diet before resorting to supplements.
I'm just trying to figure out how to get more of them in. I recently adjusted my macro ratios for the NROFLW guidelines, and apparently, I wasn't getting enough. I was usually around 15% fats rather than the recommended 30% so I'm trying to figure out how to increase that. Like I said, I never really paid attention to dietary fats before.0 -
OK basically, and this is very basic....
good fats - unsaturated fats (poly and mono) - come from vegetables (except canola, coconut oil and palm oil as they can easily become rancid at room temperature)
unsaturated fats help lower cholesterol - olive oil is a great choice to help with this and also helps with healthy heart
bad fats (which aren't really bad unless you eat heaps of it) are saturated and come from animals.
really bad fats are trans fats - deep fried and highly processed foods
Omega 3 is essential for healthy heart - if you don't like the thought of fish oil pills (they really don't taste at all) you can eat at least 2 serves a week of trout or salmon, catfish, makerel, or eat a lot of flaxseed (not whole - must be cracked to be effective).
so basically, be like the Mediterraneans and use a lot of olive oil with a little animal fat, along with a lot of fish and then you will have a healthy heart, low cholesterol and thin waist line.
hope this helps.
This helps tremendously. Thank you.0 -
OK basically, and this is very basic....
good fats - unsaturated fats (poly and mono) - come from vegetables (except canola, coconut oil and palm oil as they can easily become rancid at room temperature)
unsaturated fats help lower cholesterol - olive oil is a great choice to help with this and also helps with healthy heart
bad fats (which aren't really bad unless you eat heaps of it) are saturated and come from animals.
really bad fats are trans fats - deep fried and highly processed foods
hope this helps.0 -
OK basically, and this is very basic....
good fats - unsaturated fats (poly and mono) - come from vegetables (except canola, coconut oil and palm oil as they can easily become rancid at room temperature)
unsaturated fats help lower cholesterol - olive oil is a great choice to help with this and also helps with healthy heart
bad fats (which aren't really bad unless you eat heaps of it) are saturated and come from animals.
really bad fats are trans fats - deep fried and highly processed foods
hope this helps.
That's good to know. I was wondering about this because I do like to fry in olive oil sometimes.0
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