Butter.
Just the word can send many of my clients into a cold sweat! For decades, it has been the most vilified nutrient in the American diet.
As the scientist H.D. Eurt once said, “A little bit of nonsense repeated regularly enough for 50 years can wipe out thousands of years of truth”.
The nonsense about butter and other animal based saturated fats being responsible for heart disease and specifically the raising of cholesterol levels started back in 1977. A Senate committee led by George McGovern published its landmark Dietary Goals for the United States, urging Americans to eat less high-fat red meat, eggs and dairy and replace them with more calories from fruits, vegetables and especially carbohydrates.
By 1980 the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) issued its first dietary guidelines, and one of the primary directives was to avoid cholesterol and the fat of all animals.
Butter consumption today is nothing like it was in the roaring twenties, but thankfully it’s no longer being vilified despite its extensive nutrient benefits.
What are those benefits? Take a quick look at this video clip I did for HealthyMeTV on butter as a superfood.
And now here is one of my favorite recipes to put butter to delicious use.
It never ceases to amaze me how many people consider chicken liver pate to be unhealthy. It was once considered the number one brain food and was always highly recommended for expectant mothers. Where did all this wisdom go?
Now we consider this wonderful dish to be a sinful indulgence, but on the contrary, it’s jam packed full of essential nutrients and is on my list of super foods because it’s rich in:
FYI: breast milk contains more cholesterol than any other food! Did Mother Nature get it wrong? I think not!!
Try this pate on toast for breakfast (makes better brain food than honey on toast and most kids love it provided you don’t tell them what it’s made from!). It also makes a great mid afternoon snack with some raw organic carrot and celery sticks.
Chicken Liver Pate Recipe [dt_cell width=”1/3″]
[/dt_cell][dt_cell width=”1/3″] Directions:
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