Foods like cheese, butter, sausage, and desserts may taste good to you, but they can have a lot of saturated fat and cholesterol. Eating too much of these unhealthy fats could lead to high cholesterol and heart disease.
Start with small changes first. Use heart-healthy olive or canola oil instead of butter for cooking. Drink fat-free or low-fat milk instead of 2% milk or whole milk. Pick leaner cuts of meat.
Use this topic as a guide for making healthy choices.
Unhealthy fats
These unhealthy fats can raise your total cholesterol and your "bad" (LDL) cholesterol.
Healthy fats
Even though it's better to eat healthier fats, it's still important to be careful about how much of them you eat. All fats are high in calories, so watch your serving sizes.
If I stop cooking with butter and use olive or canola oil instead, I can reduce the amount of unhealthy fat I eat and replace it with a much healthier fat.
Eating healthy monounsaturated fats may lower your chances of getting heart disease. Monounsaturated fats are found in canola oil, olive oil, peanut oil, olives, and avocados. Butter is a saturated fat.
Eating healthy monounsaturated fats may lower your chances of getting heart disease. Monounsaturated fats are found in canola oil, olive oil, peanut oil, olives, and avocados. Butter is a saturated fat.
Eating foods that contain saturated fats can raise the LDL ("bad") cholesterol in your blood. Having a high level of LDL cholesterol increases your chance of clogged arteries (atherosclerosis), which can lead to coronary artery disease and heart attack.
Trans fats also are unhealthy. Try as much as possible to avoid eating them. Trans fat raises the level of "bad" LDL cholesterol in your blood and lowers the "good" HDL cholesterol in your blood.
HDL cholesterol is important. It helps clear the bad cholesterol from your blood so it does not clog your arteries. A high level of HDL can lower your risk of having a heart attack.
Remember, your body needs some fat to be healthy. Use the example below as a guide for eating less saturated fat.
In general:
If you're not sure how much fat you should be eating or how many calories you need each day to stay at a healthy weight, talk to a registered dietitian. He or she can help you create a plan that's right for you.
As I try to eat less unhealthy fat, I especially need to avoid trans fats.
Avoid trans fats as much as possible, because they raise your bad cholesterol. They also lower the good cholesterol in your blood. Trans fat is in many processed foods made with shortening or with partially hydrogenated or hydrogenated vegetable oils. These foods include cookies, crackers, chips, and many snack foods. (Look for trans fat on the nutrition facts label on packaged foods.) Restaurants often use hydrogenated oils for frying foods, so try to limit fried foods when you eat out.
Avoid trans fats as much as possible, because they raise your bad cholesterol. They also lower the good cholesterol in your blood. Trans fat is in many processed foods made with shortening or with partially hydrogenated or hydrogenated vegetable oils. These foods include cookies, crackers, chips, and many snack foods. (Look for trans fat on the nutrition facts label on packaged foods.) Restaurants often use hydrogenated oils for frying foods, so try to limit fried foods when you eat out.
Use the following chart as a guide.
| Food group | Limit foods that are high in unhealthy fats | Make healthier choices |
|---|---|---|
| Meat, poultry, and fish | Regular ground beef, fatty or highly marbled cuts, spare ribs, organ meat, poultry with skin, fried chicken, fried fish, fried shellfish, lunch meat, bologna, salami, sausage, hot dogs | Low-fat ground beef (97% lean), ground turkey breast (without skin added), meats with fat trimmed off before cooking, skinless chicken, low-fat or fat-free lunch meats, baked fish |
| Dairy products and eggs | Whole milk and 2% milk; whole-milk yogurt, most cheeses, and cream cheese; whole-milk cottage cheese, sour cream, and ice cream; cream; half-and-half; whipping cream; nondairy creamer; whipped topping | Low-fat (1%) or fat-free milk and cheeses, low-fat or nonfat yogurt, egg substitutes, egg whites |
| Fats and oils | Coconut oil, palm oil, butter, lard, shortening, bacon and bacon fat, stick margarine, peanut butter that has been hydrogenated (the no-stir kind) | Canola oil, olive oil, peanut oil, soft margarines with no trans fats and no more than one-third of the total fat from saturated fat, natural peanut butter that has not been hydrogenated |
| Breads and cereals | Breads in which eggs, fat, or butter is a major ingredient; most granolas (unless fat-free or low-fat); high-fat crackers; store-bought pastries and muffins | Regular breads, cereals, rice, corn tortillas, pasta, and low-fat crackers. Choose whole grains as much as possible. |
| Fruits and vegetables | Fried vegetables; coconut; vegetables cooked with butter, cheese, or cream sauce | All fruits and vegetables that do not have added fat |
| Sweets and desserts | Ice cream; store-bought pies, cakes, doughnuts, and cookies made with coconut oil, palm oil, or hydrogenated oil; chocolate candy | Fruit; frozen yogurt; low-fat or nonfat versions of treats such as ice cream; cakes and cookies made with unsaturated fats and/or those made with cocoa powder |
Tips for healthier meals
Try some of these ideas:
Restaurant meals
If you eat out often, it may be hard to avoid unhealthy fats. Try these tips:
Fat-free foods
Sometimes a fat-free food isn't the best choice. Fat-free cookies, candies, chips, and frozen treats can still be high in sugar and calories. Some fat-free foods have more calories than regular ones. Eat fat-free foods in moderation, as you would other foods.
To eat less saturated fat, I'm going to try to choose leaner meats. I'll trim the fat off the meat that I do eat, and I'll eat skinless chicken.
You don't have to cut meat out of your diet completely if you want to eat less saturated fat. Buy low-fat ground beef (97% lean), trim off fat from other meats before you cook them, and pick low-fat lunch meats.
You don't have to cut meat out of your diet completely if you want to eat less saturated fat. Buy low-fat ground beef (97% lean), trim off fat from other meats before you cook them, and pick low-fat lunch meats.
Now that you've learned what fats to cut first, you can make healthier choices for meals.
Talk with your doctor
If you have questions about this information, print it out and take it with you when you visit your doctor. You may want to mark areas or make notes in the margins where you have questions.
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Last Revised: February 4, 2011
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