What is fat George Zaidan

Translator: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Jessica Ruby

Olive oil is 100% fat;

there’s nothing else in it.

Pancake mix, on the other hand,

is only about 11% fat.

And, yet, olive oil is good for you,

and pancake mix is not.

Why is that?

As it turns out,

the amount of fat we eat

doesn’t impact our weight

or our cholesterol

or our risk of heart disease

nearly as much as what kind of fat we eat.

But let’s back up:

What is fat?

If we were to zoom in on a salmon,

which is a fatty fish,

past the organs,

past the tissues,

into the cells,

we would see that the stuff we call fat

is actually made up of molecules called triglycerides,

and they are not all alike.

Here’s one example.

Those three carbons on the left, that’s glycerol.

Now, you can think of that as the backbone

that holds the rest of the molecule together.

The three long chains on the right

are called fatty acids,

and it’s subtle differences in the structures of these chains

that determine whether a fat is,

let’s say, solid or liquid;

whether or not it goes rancid quickly;

and, most importantly, how good or how bad it is for you.

Let’s take a look at some of these differences.

One is length.

Fatty acids can be short or long.

Another, more important difference

is the type of bond between the carbon atoms.

Some fatty acids have only single bonds.

Others have both single and double bonds.

Fatty acids with only single bonds

are called saturated,

and those with one or more double bonds

are called unsaturated.

Now, most unsaturated fats are good for you,

while saturated fats are bad for you in excess.

For saturated fats, the story pretty much ends there

but not for unsaturated fats.

The double bonds in these molecules

have a kind of weird property;

they’re rigid.

So, that means there are two ways

to arrange every double bond.

The first is like this,

where both hydrogens are on same side

and both carbons are on the same side.

The second way is like this.

Now the hydrogens and carbons

are on opposite sides of the double bond.

Now, even though both of these molecules

are made up of exactly the same building blocks,

they are two completely different substances,

and they behave completely differently inside of us.

The configuration on the left is called CIS,

which you’ve probably never heard of.

The one of the right is called TRANS,

and you probably have heard of trans fats before.

They don’t go rancid,

they’re more stable during deep frying,

and they can change the texture of foods

in ways that other fats just can’t.

They’re also terrible for your health,

by far worse than saturated fat,

even though technically they’re a type

of unsaturated fat.

Now, I know that seems crazy,

but your body doesn’t care

what a molecule looks like on paper.

All that matters is the 3-D shape

where the molecule fits,

where it doesn’t,

and what pathways it interferes with.

So, how do you know if a food

has trans fat in it?

Well, the only sure way to know

is if you see the words,

“partially hydrogenated” in the ingredients list.

Don’t let nutrition labels or advertising fool you.

The FDA allows manufacturers to claim

that their products contain

“0” grams of trans fat

even if they actually have up to half a gram per serving.

But there are no hard and fast rules

about how small a serving can be,

and, that means, you’ll have to rely on seeing those key words,

partially hydrogenated,

because that’s how trans fats are made,

by partially hydrogenating unsaturated fats.

So, let’s go back to our olive oil and pancake mix from before.

Olive oil is 100% fat.

Pancake mix is only 11% fat.

But olive oil is mostly unsaturated fat,

and it has no trans fat at all.

On the other hand, more than half the fat

in pancake mix is either saturated or trans fat.

And, so, even though olive oil has 10 times

as much fat as pancake mix,

it’s healthy for you,

whereas pancake mix is not.

Now, I’m not trying to pick on pancake mix.

There are lots of foods

with this type of fat profile.

The point is this:

It’s not how much fat you eat,

it’s what kind of fat.

And what makes a particular fat healthy or unhealthy

is its shape.

译者:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Jessica Ruby

橄榄油是 100% 脂肪;

里面没有别的东西。

另一方面,煎饼

混合物只有大约 11% 的脂肪。

然而,橄榄油对你有好处,

而煎饼混合物则不然。

这是为什么?

事实证明

,我们吃的脂肪量

对我们的体重

、胆固醇

或心脏病风险的影响

几乎与我们吃的脂肪一样多。

但让我们备份:

什么是脂肪?

如果我们放大鲑鱼,

它是一种富含脂肪的鱼,

经过器官,

经过组织,

进入细胞,

我们会看到我们称之为脂肪的东西

实际上是由叫做甘油三酯的分子组成的

,它们不是 都一样。

这是一个例子。

左边那三个碳,就是甘油。

现在,您可以将其视为

将分子其余部分结合在一起的骨架。

右边的三个长链

称为脂肪酸

,这些链结构的细微差别

决定了脂肪

是固体还是液体。

它是否很快变质;

而且,最重要的是,它对你有多好或多坏。

让我们来看看其中的一些差异。

一是长度。

脂肪酸可以是短的或长的。

另一个更重要的区别

是碳原子之间的键类型。

一些脂肪酸只有单键。

其他的有单键和双键。

只有单键的脂肪酸

称为饱和脂肪酸

,有一个或多个双键

的称为不饱和脂肪酸。

现在,大多数不饱和脂肪对你有好处,

而饱和脂肪过多对你有害。

对于饱和脂肪,故事就差不多到此为止了,

但对于不饱和脂肪则不然。

这些分子

中的双键具有一种奇怪的性质;

他们很僵硬。

因此,这意味着有两种方法

可以排列每个双键。

第一个是这样的

,两个氢都在同一侧

,两个碳都在同一侧。

第二种方式是这样的。

现在氢和

碳位于双键的相对两侧。

现在,尽管这两种分子

都是由完全相同的构件组成,

但它们是两种完全不同的物质

,它们在我们体内的行为也完全不同。

左侧的配置称为 CIS

,您可能从未听说过。

右边的一种叫做

反式脂肪,你可能以前听说过反式脂肪。

它们不会变质,

在油炸过程中更稳定,

并且可以

以其他脂肪无法做到的方式改变食物的质地。

它们对您的健康也

很不利,远比饱和脂肪更糟糕,

尽管从技术上讲它们是

一种不饱和脂肪。

现在,我知道这看起来很疯狂,

但你的身体并不

关心分子在纸上的样子。

重要的是分子适合的 3-D 形状

,不适合的

地方,

以及它干扰的途径。

那么,你怎么知道食物中

是否含有反式脂肪呢?

好吧,唯一确定的方法

是您是否

在成分列表中看到“部分氢化”字样。

不要让营养标签或广告欺骗你。

FDA允许制造商

声称他们的产品含有

“0”克反式脂肪,

即使他们实际上每份含有半克。

但是

对于一份食物的份量并没有硬性规定

,这意味着,你必须依靠看到这些关键词,

部分氢化,

因为反式脂肪就是

通过部分氢化不饱和脂肪来制造的。

所以,让我们回到之前的橄榄油和煎饼混合物。

橄榄油是 100% 脂肪。

煎饼混合物只有 11% 的脂肪。

但橄榄油主要是不饱和脂肪

,根本没有反式脂肪。

另一方面,煎饼混合物中超过一半的脂肪

是饱和脂肪或反式脂肪。

因此,即使橄榄油

的脂肪含量是煎饼混合物的 10 倍,

但它对您是健康的,

而煎饼混合物则不然。

现在,我不想选择煎饼混合物。

有很多

具有这种脂肪特征的食物。

重点是:

这不是你吃多少脂肪,

而是什么样的脂肪。

使特定脂肪健康或不健康的原因

在于它的形状。