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Not all Fats are Alike: We have a dilemma here. Fat is, to put it bluntly,
fattening. The more fat we eat, the more calories we consume, and the harder it
is to lose weight. But if we cut down on fats, we also cut out the essential
fatty acids and the fat-soluble vitamins.
Replacing the fats you now eat with coconut oil may be the wisest decision
you can make to lose excess body fat.
What if there was a fat that had fewer calories than other fats and
contributed no more to weight gain than protein or carbohydrate, and actually
promoted better health, would you be interested? Sounds like a pipe dream
doesn’t it? It’s not. There actually is a fat that can do this. That fat is
found in coconut oil.
Replacing the fats you now eat with coconut oil may be the wisest decision
you can make to lose excess body fat. We often think that the less fat we eat,
the better. However, you don’t necessarily need to reduce your fat intake, you
simply need to choose a fat that is better for you, one that doesn’t contribute
to weight gain. You can lose unwanted body fat by eating more saturated fat (in
the form of coconut oil) and less polyunsaturated fat (processed vegetable
oils).
One of the remarkable things about coconut oil is that it can help you lose
weight. Yes, there is a dietary fat that can actually help you take off unwanted
pounds. Coconut oil can quite literally be called a low-fat fat.
All fats, whether they be saturated or unsaturated, from a cow or from corn,
contain the same number of calories. The MCFA (medium chain fatty acids) in
coconut oil, however, are different. They contain a little less. Because of the
small size of the fatty acids that make up coconut oil, they actually yield
fewer calories than other fats. MCT oil, which is derived from coconut oil and
consists of 75 percent caprylic acid (C:8) and 25 percent capric acid (C:10),
has an effective energy value of only 6.8 calories per gram. (1) This is much
less than the 9 calories per gram supplied by other fats. Coconut oil has at
least 2.56 percent fewer calories per gram of fat than long-chain fatty acids (LCFA).
(2) This means that by using coconut oil in place of other oils your calorie
intake is less.
This small reduction in calories is only part of the picture. The amount of
calories coconut oil contributes is in effect closer to that of carbohydrate
because it is digested and processed differently than other fats. The digestive
and metabolic effects are discussed below.
Produces Energy, Not Fat
When people go on diets to lose weight, the foods that are restricted most
are those which contain the most fat. Why is fat singled out? We know it is high
in calories, but there is also another reason. Because of the way it is digested
and utilized in our bodies, it contributes the most to body fat. The fat we eat
is the fat we wear – literally.
When we eat fat, the fat is broken down into individual fatty acids and
repackaged into small bundles of fat and protein called lipoproteins. These
lipoproteins are sent into the bloodstream where the fatty acids are deposited
directly into our fat cells. Other nutrients such as carbohydrate and protein
are broken down and used immediately for energy or tissue building. Only when we
eat too much is the excess carbohydrate and protein converted into fat. As long
as we eat enough to satisfy energy needs, fat in our food always ends up as fat
in our cells. Only between meals when physical activity outpaces energy reserves
is fat removed from storage and burned for fuel.
MCFA, however, are digested and utilized differently. They are not packaged
into lipoproteins and do not circulate in the bloodstream like other fats, but
are sent directly to the liver where they are immediately converted into energy
– just like a carbohydrate. So when you eat coconut oil, the body uses it
immediately to make energy rather than store it as body fat. As a consequence,
you can eat much more coconut oil than you can other oils before the excess is
converted into fat. It has been well documented in numerous studies using both
animals and humans that replacing LCFA with MCFA results in a decrease in body
weight gain and a reduction in fat deposition. (3-9)
These studies have provided the scientific verification that replacing
traditional sources of dietary fat, which are composed primarily of LCFA, with
MCFA, yields meals having a lower effective calorie content. MCFA can be a
useful tool in the controlling of weight gain and fat deposition. The simplest
and best way to replace LCFA with MCFA is to use coconut oil in the preparation
of your food.
A Metabolic Marvel
Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to take a pill that would shift our metabolic
rate into a higher gear? In a sense that is what happens every time we eat. Food
affects our BMR. When we eat, many of our body’s cells increase their activities
to facilitate digestion and assimilation. This stimulation of cellular activity
known as diet-induced thermogenesis, uses about 10 percent of the total food
energy taken in. Perhaps you have noticed, particularly on cool days, that you
feel warmer after eating a meal. Your body’s engines are running at a slightly
higher rate, so more heat is produced. Different types of foods produce
different thermogenic effects. Protein-rich foods such as meat increase
thermogenesis and have a stimulatory or energizing effect on the body. (*This is
true as long as you don’t overeat. Overeating puts tremendous strain on the
digestive system which can drain your energy and make you feel tired. This is
why we often feel sleepy after a big meal.) Protein has a much greater
thermogenic effect than either carbohydrate or fat. This is why when people
suddenly cut down on meat consumption or become vegetarians they often complain
of a lack of energy. This is also one of the reasons high protein diets promote
weight loss – the increase in metabolism burns off more calories.
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| One food that can rev up your metabolism even more than protein is
coconut oil. |
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One food that can rev up your metabolism even more than protein is coconut
oil. MCFA shift the body’s metabolism into a higher gear, so to speak, so that
you burn more calories. This happens every time you eat MCFA. Because MCFA
increase the metabolic rate, they are dietary fats that can actually promote
weight loss! A dietary fat that takes off weight rather than putting it on is a
strange concept indeed, but that is exactly what happens, so long as calories in
excess of the body’s needs are not consumed. MCFA are easily absorbed and
rapidly burned and used as energy for metabolism, thus increasing metabolic
activity and even burning LCFA. (10) So not only are medium-chain fatty acids
burned for energy production, but they encourage the burning of long-chain fatty
acids as well.
Dr. Julian Whitaker, a well-known authority on nutrition and health, makes
this analogy between the long-chain triglycerides (LCT) and medium chain
triglycerides (MCT): “LCTs are like heavy wet logs that you put on a small
campfire. Keep adding the logs, and soon you have more logs than fire. MCTs are
like rolled up newspaper soaked in gasoline. They not only burn brightly, but
will burn up the wet logs as well.” (11)
Research supports Dr. Whitaker’s view. In one study, the thermogenic
(fat-burning) effect of a high-calorie diet containing 40 percent fat as MCFA
was compared to one containing 40 percent fat as LCFA. The thermogenic effect of
the MCFA was almost twice as high as the LCFA: 120 calories versus 66 calories.
The researchers concluded that the excess energy provided by fats in the form of
MCFA would not be efficiently stored as fat, but rather would be burned. A
follow-up study demonstrated that MCFA given over a six-day period can increase
diet-induced thermogenesis by 50 percent. (12)
In another study, researchers compared single meals of 400 calories composed
entirely of MCFA and of LCFA. (13) The thermogenic effect of MCFA over six hours
was three times greater than that of LCFA. Researchers concluded that
substituting MCFA for LCFA would produce weight loss as long as calorie level
remained the same.
Coconut oil contains the most concentrated natural source of MCFA available.
Substituting coconut oil for other vegetable oils in your diet will help promote
weight loss. The use of refined vegetable oil actually promotes weight gain, not
just from its calorie content, but because of its harmful effects on the thyroid
– the gland that controls metabolism. Polyunsaturated vegetable oils depress
thyroid activity, thus lowering metabolic rate – just the opposite of coconut
oil. Eating polyunsaturated oils, like soybean oil, will contribute more to
weight gain than any other fat known, even more than beef tallow and lard.
According to Ray Peat, Ph.D., an endocrinologist who specializes in the study of
hormones, unsaturated oils block thyroid hormone secretion, its movement in the
circulation, and the response of tissues to the hormone. When thyroid hormones
are deficient, metabolism becomes depressed. (14) Polyunsaturated oils are, in
essence, high-fat fats which encourage weight gain more than any other fats. If
you wanted to lose weight, you would be better off eating lard, because lard
doesn’t interfere with thyroid function.
Farmers are always looking for ways to fatten their livestock because bigger
animals bring bigger profits. Fats and oils are used as additive in animal feed
to quickly pack on weight in preparing them for market. Saturated fat seems like
a good choice to fatten up livestock so pig farmers tired to feed coconut
products to their animals for this purpose, but when it was added to the animal
feed, the pigs lost weight! (15) Farmers found that the high polyunsaturated oil
content of corn and soybeans quickly did what the coconut oil couldn’t. Animals
fed corn and soybeans packed on pounds quickly and easily. The reason these oils
worked so well is that their oils suppressed thyroid function, decreasing the
animal’s metabolic rate. Soybeans are particularly bad because of the goitrogens
(anti-thyroid chemicals) they contain. (16-17) They could eat less food and gain
more weight! Many people are in a similar situation. Every time we eat
polyunsaturated oils, our thyroid gland is assaulted and loses its ability to
function normally. Weight gain is one of the consequences.
Up until now most people have been afraid of using coconut oil because of the
propaganda war waged by the soybean industry. People were led to believe that
coconut oil was both unhealthy and fattening, neither of which are true. The
fats in coconut oil, for the most part, do not become fatty tissues on our
bodies. They produce energy. This is one of the reasons why food manufacturers
put coconut oil or MCFA in sports drinks and energy bars. It is interesting to
note that soybean oil does just the opposite. It promotes weight gain and fat
deposition. We use more soybean and hydrogenated oils than ever before. Over the
past couple of decades, as soybean oil has replaced tropical oils in our foods,
the problem of obesity has mushroomed. Both adults and children are much fatter
than they used to be. It appears that the soybean industry’s war on coconut oil
has contributed to our expanding weight problem. If you want to lose unwanted
weight, the best thing you can do is to avoid those oils that make you fat and
start using coconut oil – the world’s only natural low-fat fat.
The Coconut Diet
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| In order for a diet to work it needs to be permanent. This cannot be
done with a weight-reducing diet. |
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According to the Mayo Clinic, 95 percent of those people who go on weight
loss diets regain all their weight back within five years. Many regain more
weight than they had before. The diets not only don’t work but can make matters
worse. In order for a diet to work it needs to be permanent. This cannot be done
with a weight-reducing diet. These types of diets are looked on as temporary
restrictions in food, and as soon as the weight is lost we go back to eating the
way we did before, the way that made us fat in the first place. You never stay
slim by eating the way you used to. In order to lose weight permanently you must
make a permanent change. This, however, is undesirable for most people. Who in
their right mind would want to remain on a weight-loss diet forever? These diets
are just too restrictive and in many cases unhealthy.
But what if I told you there was a diet that you would like, that you could
stay on permanently and still enjoy most of your favorite foods without worrying
about counting calories or weighing food? For lack of any better name I call it
“The Coconut Diet.” I call it this because it is based around coconut and the
fact that coconut oil is a reduced-calorie fat which promotes weight loss.
The coconut diet is simple. The most important and most unique feature of
this diet is that coconut oil and other coconut products are used as much as
possible. Most people are not accustomed to using coconut, so at first they may
think this might be difficult, but it’s not. You can add coconut products to
your ordinary way of eating without noticing much change.
The most important change is replacing all the refined vegetable oils you
currently use in your food preparation with coconut oil. Eliminate all
margarine, shortening, and other hydrogenated oils from your diet. Olive oil and
butter are okay, but use coconut oil whenever possible.
The second thing you should do is use other coconut products as much as
possible. Find ways to use fresh and dried coconut. You can find recipes in
cookbooks. Coconut milk is a wonderful item that can be used in a wide variety
of dishes. It can replace cow’s milk and cream in most any recipe and tastes
great. Some of the dishes I make using coconut milk include butterscotch
pudding, coconut milk pancakes, clam chowder, chicken almondine, and creamy
coconut gravy, to mention just a few. Coconut milk that you buy in the can is
not sweetened so it can be used for a wide variety of main dishes or desserts.
With delicious meals like these, dieting can be a pleasure, and because there
are no calorie restrictions to worry about, it can easily be maintained for life
without feeling hungry or deprived.
References:
- U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Obesity Still on the Rise, New
Data Show,” Tuesday, October 8, 2002 Published on the Centers for Disease
Control website:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/releases/02news/obesityonrise.htm
- Rex Russell, M.D. What the Bible Says About Healthy Living (Regal Books,
Ventura, CA 1996) p.125
- M.T. See and J. Odle, “EFFECT OF DIETARY FAT SOURCE, LEVEL, AND FEEDING
INTERVAL ON PORK FATTY ACID COMPOSITION” 1998-2000 Departmental Report,
Department of Animal Science, ANS Report No. 248 - North Carolina State
University
- Gary Taubes “What If It Were All a Big Fat Lie!” New York Times July 7, 2002
- Griswold KE, Apgar GA, et. al. “Effectiveness of short-term feeding
strategies for altering conjugated linoleic acid content of beef.” Journal
Animal Science, 2003 Jul;81(7):1862-71.
- Scollan ND, Enser M, et. al., “Effects of including a ruminally protected
lipid supplement in the diet on the fatty acid composition of beef muscle.”
British Journal Nutrition. 2003 Sep;90(3):709-16.
- Endres J, Barter S, Theodora P, Welch P., “Soy-enhanced lunch acceptance by
preschoolers.” Journal American Diet Assoc. 2003 Mar;103(3):346-51.
- Hill JO, Peters JC, Yang D, Sharp T, Kaler M, Abumrad NN, Greene HL
“Thermogenesis in humans during overfeeding with medium-chain triglycerides.”
Metabolism. July.1989;38(7):641-8.
- St-Onge MP, Ross R, Parsons WD, Jones PJ “Medium-chain triglycerides increase
energy expenditure and decrease adiposity in overweight men.” Obes Res. 2003
Mar;11(3):395-402.
- G. Crozier, B. Bois-Joyeux, M Chanex, et. al. “Overfeeding with medium-chain
triglycerides in the rat.” Metabolism 1987;36:807-814.
- T. B. Seaton, S. L. Welles, M. K. Warenko, et al. “Thermic effects of
medium-chain and long-chain triglycerides in man.” Am J Clin Nutr,
1986;44:630-634.
- J. J. Kabara “Health Oils From the Tree of Life" (Nutritional and Health
Aspects of Coconut Oil). Indian Coconut Journal 2000;31(8):2-8.
Related Information:

· Comparison of Dietary Fats

· Fatty Acid Composition of
Various Fats and Oils

· Fatty Acid Metabolism
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