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Butter vs margarine

Home » Magazine » Good, issue 10 » Butter vs margarine

The yellowy goodness of natural New Zealand butter is hard to top, but should we turn to manufactured margarine for the sake of our health? Olivia Wix investigates

Butter

Kiwis love butter—the way it oozes from our knives and coats our crumpets, the way it sizzles in the frying pan. But does pure, natural butter do more harm than good? Could processed, artificial margarine really be better for us? When the ‘Trans fatty acids’ article in Good #9 (see good.net.nz/transfat) received a huge email response from Good readers, concerned that we were too easy on margarine, we decided to investigate further.

Butter originated around 9,000 BC, when sheep’s or goat’s milk was stored in a goat skin, hung from sticks and rocked until butter formed. By the mid-1800s, demand for butter had climbed so high that Napoleon III of France held a competition to find an inexpensive substitute. And so, in 1869, margarine was created. It became so popular that many countries made it illegal, to protect local butter producers. With our dairy industry under threat, New Zealand was the last country to decriminalise margarine in 1974.

The butter versus margarine debate has been around almost as long as the spreads themselves. In terms of health, it’s always been a battle of the fats. Butter contains almost 50 percent saturated fat, while margarine can contain unhealthy trans fatty acids (also known as trans fat). But over the past few years, major manufacturers have almost completely eliminated trans fat from margarines; most spreads now contain less than one percent trans fat.

The New Zealand Heart Foundation and AUT University nutrition professor Elaine Rush says margarine is now considered the best choice for heart health. “If you’re going to eat fat, eat margarine, not butter,” says Elaine. “It’s much better for you; there’s not nearly as much cholesterol.”

But not all margarines are created equal: unsalted spreads or those based on olive oil are best. “The best kind of margarine you can use is polyunsaturated,” says Elaine. “If that’s not available, go for monounsaturated and then, if you have to, go for the saturated fat.” She recommends oils based on seeds and nuts, such as avocado oil—but not all plant-based fats are good. “Coconut- and palm oil-based products are still quite high in saturated fats, even though they aren’t from animals.”

But what about the other problems plaguing the margarine industry? It’s certainly not a natural food; rumour has it that without bleaching margarine would be an unappealing shade of grey.

Food technologist Dr Patrick Janssen says that rumour is unfounded—although if the original colour of the oils were allowed to remain, vegetable oil-based marge would be slightly green and palm oil-based spreads red-tinged. Rather than bleaching the margarine itself, clay is used to remove colouring from the oils. Artificial colours such as carotene are added later to give that sunshine yellow colour. Patrick says that while artificial colours have been linked to cancers, the small amounts in your spreads are nothing to worry about.

The energy involved in manufacturing spreads is also a concern for many. We think of butter as being natural, but both butter and margarine undergo industrial processes, and vitamins and preservatives are added to each. To make butter, cream is separated from milk using extreme heat, then refrigerated overnight. It’s put into another machine, whipped to add air, and transferred into a big food processor-like machine to achieve the right consistency before another machine prepares it for packaging.

The margarine manufacturing process is more intensive. Vegetable oils come from overseas—mainly North America, although palm oil comes from Malaysia and Indonesia, where its production is linked to rainforest destruction and the extinction of orang-utans. The oils are withdrawn from the plants or seeds by both a cold and hot processing machine, after which a refining process removes natural colouring and odours. The oil is steamed, flooded with hydrogen, mixed with water and thickened with emulsifiers, before it goes through processing and packaging stages similar to butter.

Marge’s packaging is also energy-intensive: layers of plastic and polystyrene go through various heating and cooling processes to create the plastic tub in the supermarket fridge. Butter wrappers aren’t free of environmental impact either, mainly because of the wax and dye used in printing. Margarine containers can be recycled, but butter wrappers cannot.

It’s difficult to determine which spread is best: butter is certainly more natural, while margarine has health advantages. The Heart Foundation proposes what might be the best solution: whichever you choose to eat, make sure you don’t eat it every day (even as an ingredient in prepared food). With that in mind, your choice comes down to personal preference—what suits your health, your morals and your taste buds?

Comments

Sarah
 
Thu March 18, 2010 @ 08:31 PM
Butter is better. Julia Child cooked with it for a reason. It is a natural product - just buy organic. 
Meg
 
Wed March 24, 2010 @ 09:13 AM
And butter doesn't have palm oil in it like most margarines so you aren't contributing to orangatan decline by eating butter
Eric Richards
 
Sat March 27, 2010 @ 07:45 AM
The advantage with butter is you know it is going to taste like butter and in my opinion unsalted better taste better (just make sure to keep it fresh), margarine has 1001 different tastes. I once went to buy a scone form a lunch bar, the shop said “should I put some butter on it” I don't know what they put on it, but it look like some puffed up cream, and it tasted foul! I had one bite, the birds got the rest.

Someone once told me margarine was one chemical away from turning into a plastic bag, I said what about bread that is a chemical recipe, yes that super deluxe super soft bread has even more chemical added into it, but it was clear he was a one opinion one track man.

Just recently I have given up on butter & margarine, some table spreads are quick to get used to without the use of butter or margarine, Jam and honey sandwiches take a little longer but it can be done.

I am thinking of witting a web page “Butter, Salt & Sugar” for my web site. Do we need butter? We need salt (but not too much) and we don't need sugar (try eating more fruit), with some very interesting comments for the body of the story.
Last Edit: April 03, 2010 @ 02:54PM by Su Yin Khoo 
Republicano
 
Mon March 29, 2010 @ 11:23 AM
Just because the heart foundation puts a tick on it doesnt mean its healthy -  alot of meat products has a tick while weet-bix doesnt because they would rather not pay the 100 grand symbol yearly on its product.
Su Yin Khoo
 
Mon March 29, 2010 @ 11:26 AM
@Republicano: Wow, I never noticed the lack of a Heart Foundation tick on the Weetbix box!
Sarah James
via letters@good.net.nz
 
Thu April 01, 2010 @ 12:36 PM
I was disappointed in the article ‘Butter vs Marge’ in issue 10. I felt that the article was very one-sided in that it did not mention any of the positive aspects of butter and did not quote any health professionals who believe that butter is actually good for you. 

Butter is a real food that has been eaten for thousands of years and a great source of the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K as well as several trace minerals.  A very important note is that in New Zealand cows are predominately grass-fed, which increases the nutritional value of butter compared to factory-farmed cows in the United States and other countries.

Although butter is high in saturated fat, butter actually has a complex mix of hundreds of different types of fats including relatively high amounts monounsaturated fats and respectable levels of omega-3 fatty acids.  Butter from grass-fed cows also contains conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), a compound which has strong anti-cancer properties. 

Many of the studies that concluded that saturated fat was harmful were in fact done with artificially saturated fats, not  the traditionally eaten saturated fats from animal-based foods.  Human beings actually need many different types of fat in their diets, including saturated fat.  

This raises the question: are naturally occuring fats, the types of fats from real foods eaten for thousands of years, actually something we need to avoid?  Dr. Mary Enig, a leading fats researcher and nutritionist in the United States, advises that people include a variety of fats in their diets, including natural fats from animal sources.  

Additionally, there are great alternatives to eating either butter or margarine.  Healthy substitutes are mashed avocado, hummus, and extra-virgin olive oil.

Thank you very much!

Kind regards,
Sarah James, Nutritionist
Grey Lynn, Auckland

References:
Eric Richards
 
Sat April 03, 2010 @ 09:27 AM
Interesting comment Republicano: The box of my oat bran “Weet-Bix” has the Heart Foundation tick on it, I eat them like a biscuit then eat a apple afterwards to clear the teeth. I tried other weet bix bands but not as nice to eat like a biscuit as the oat bran. (could have something to do with the way they have screwed our milk, were as before it only lasted a day as “real milk”)

I think maybe we should have some other tick on our food as well, like say a rainbow were say each color band represents a good feature of the food. Food with the full compliment of color bands means it is better than other equivalent foods with bands missing.

Maybe Good Magazine upcoming issue might like to open up this discussion further.

By the way:
1st: I don't have any food,health or medical qualifications so I need to be guided.

2nd: Could be middle or end of 2009 some food body ask the public for comments, I suggested that lunch bars have available for inspection by customers “nutrition information” on there food available for sale in their shop, I wonder what happened with that? (it need not be sold with any item just available to be shown if asked for, or posted on their wall)

3rd: Interesting page http://www.westonaprice.org/Why-Butter-Is-Better.html
Last Edit: April 03, 2010 @ 02:53PM by Su Yin Khoo 
Nonavee Dale
 
Tue April 06, 2010 @ 09:46 AM
What about packaging?  I buy butter because it's simpler-- just paper packaging, and keep it out in a good container so that it stays soft enough to use.  All the plastic that gets created just for margarine is crazy!
Sarah Tennant
 
Thu April 08, 2010 @ 10:53 PM
Sarah James: Nice to see another Traditional Foodist around! I couldn't agree more. Butter has been eaten for thousands of years by people groups who "paradoxically" managed to stay free of the heart disease, diabetes and obesity crippling the West today. Natural saturated fats aren't the enemy.

Quite apart from nutritional considerations, butter tastes like food. Vegetable oils and margarines don't. My toddler picks bits of butter off bread to eat by itself - I can't see her lapping up canola or marg! You won't see a chef using margarine - or most processed, dead foods - because it simply isn't the best.

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