Nina Teicholz on why saturated fats are good for you

Nina explained how she became interested in researching saturated fats, followed by diving into the history of how saturated fats were vilified. (I recommend my conversation with Tim Noakes.)

Then Nina debunked the myth that saturated fats are bad for health and explained why reducing grains, starches and sugars improve overall health.

There is no association between saturated fat consumption and heart disease. In fact, it can be part of a healthy diet and help raise good cholesterol levels.

– Aseem Malhotra, cardiologist

She also covered the negative imapct of carbohydrates, the ineffectiveness of calorie counting and the ‘differences’ between simple and complex carbohydrates (the latter of which is quite interesting).

Towards the end, Nina touched on various types of sugars like fructose and sucrose.

The years before obesity

Oh, and very importantly, Nina does not receive any money from any interest groups. She is independent and has never sold herself to any of the food industries.

The fewer carbohydrates we consume, the leaner we will be.

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    Richard

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    Not sure any of those in the pics are eating a healthy diet of veg, fruit , nuts etc

    Me thinks they are lovers of the Big Mac .

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Charles Higley

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    Vegan is another word for “poor hunter.” We are designed for animal protein and digest it to almost 100%. Vegans are literally full of sh** and think they are heathy. Too much roughage is not good thing. Long-term malnutrition comes from veganism as they eventually run out of essential amino acids and poison themselves with polyunsaturated fatty acids.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Saeed Qureshi

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    Nina Teicholz’s education is described as follows.

    “Teicholz attended Yale and Stanford where she studied biology and majored in American Studies. She has a master’s degree from Oxford University and a PhD in nutrition from the University of Reading.”

    There is no mention of science education/expertise. Nutrition is not a science subject, like biology and medical science, and looking at how these are faired for science claims (viruses, testing, vaccines, etc.) – horrible. One should expect the same for science from nutrition experts.

    https://bioanalyticx.com/what-is-science-and-who-are-scientists/

    Reply

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