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This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm reading it right now, it's quite the tome.
If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are interested. here is the link for the .99 offer. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX ----------------------------------- The year was 1837, and the place was Cincinnatithe nations hub for all things pig. With its prime location, explosion of tanneries and slaughterhouses, and herds of swine tottering through the streets, the city had earned the nickname Porkopolis, shipping pork galore down river and feeding mouths near and far. And for two of the citys accidental transplantsWilliam Procter and James Gamblethat meant a steady supply of their businesss most precious commodity: lard. But cooking with it was the last thing on the mens minds. Instead, the rendered fat was the chief ingredient for their candles and soaps. That the men had met at allmuch less launched the now-largest consumer goods company in the worldwas somewhat serendipitous. Procter, an English candle maker, had been voyaging to the great American West when his first wife died of choleracutting short his travels and leaving him stuck in Cincinnati. Gamble, an Irish soap maker, had been Illinois-bound when unexpected illness plopped him in the Queen City as well. Cupid mustve seen a prime opportunity for meddling, because the men ended up falling in love with two Cincinnati women who just happened to be sisters. Marriage ensued, and with it came their new father-in-laws flash of insight that the men, who were already competing for the same materials for their soap and candle-making pursuits, ought to become business partners. And thus was born Procter and Gambleor P&G, as we know it today. The Death of Lard Though Procter & Gamble enjoyed early success, its lifebloodthe animal-fat industrysaw the first hint of its eventual undoing near the turn of the century. It was a death-march summoned largely by journalist Upton Sinclair. After a two-month investigation of Chicagos meatpacking district, he penned a fictional tale inspired by the horrors hed witnessed: revolting conditions for immigrant workers, unsanitary meat-handling practices, and an utter abuse of power by the nations industrial masters. It wasnt long before the novel, titled The Jungle and first published as serial installments in the socialist newspaper Appeal to Reason, took the nation by storm. Unfortunately, it wasnt the kind of storm Sinclair was banking on. While he assumed the book would evoke sympathy for the working class (and, if all went as planned, win support for the socialist movement), readers were too shocked by his descriptions of meat production to care much about the workers social plight: the stench of the killing beds, the acid-devoured fingers of pickle-room men, the poisoned rats scrambling onto meat piles and inadvertently joining Americas food supply. If nothing else, Sinclair succeeded in churning an unprecedented number of stomachs. And the sinking ship of meats reputation brought with it another casualty: lard. As one gruesome passage described: The other men, who worked in the tank rooms full of steam, and in some of which there were open vats near the level of the floor, their peculiar trouble was that they fell into the vats; and when they were fished out, there was never enough of them to be worth exhibiting sometimes they would be overlooked for days, till all but the bones of them had gone out to the world as Durhams Pure Leaf Lard! The image of lard containing the renderings of people proved too vivid to purge from memorya sort of Soylent Green prelude. Shortly after The Jungle exploded onto the scene, sales of American meat products sank by half. And while the book never elicited the political response Sinclair had hoped for, it did lead to a food-safety uproar so profound that the US government had to step in and calm its horrified citizens. In 1906, mere months after the books debut, Congress passed two landmark actsthe Federal Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906to enforce standards for food production and help Americans feel better about what they were eating. (The two acts collectively set the groundwork for the Food and Drug Administration years later.) Believing The Jungle failed as a social commentary but inadvertently succeeded as an exposeÌ on food sanitation, Sinclair later remarked: I aimed at the publics heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach! But even if Sinclairs book managed to sour Americans on lard, no alternatives other than butter currently existed to satisfy the countrys cooking needs. At least not yet. Over in France, chemist Paul Sabatier had been busily developing the hydrogenation processthe act of shooting hydrogen atoms into an unsaturated chemical compound. Though his early work was limited to vapors, it wasnt long before another scientist, Wilhelm Normann, replicated the procedure using oilsdemonstrating for the first time that a liquid fat could, through deft chemical tweaking, become solid at room temperature.. At the time, it seemed on par with lead-to-gold alchemy. And best of all, the thick, creamy result of hydrogenation was exactly what P&G needed to seal their legacy. Although the company spent years oblivious to those oversea hydrogenation miracles, a pivotal moment came in 1907 when Edwin Kaysera recent transplant to Cincinnati, and chemist for the company that owned the rights to the process of hydrogenating oilapproached Procter & Gambles business manager with an idea. Why not use this revolutionary new substance to make soap? It didnt take long before the dream was a reality. By 1908, the company owned eight cottonseed mills and had secured a steady supply of the oil they needed to feed production. Elbows-deep in the cottonseed market, Procter & Gamble realized their soap makingas lucrative as it washad only tapped the surface of cottonseed oils potential. And the company soon found itself facing a new conundrum: the dawn of the electrical age. Although it would be many more years before the whole country was firelessly alight, candle sales were already taking a blow, and Procter and Gamble knew they needed to keep pace with the changing world to avoid a financial nosedive. It was time to enter the kitchen. The Birth of Trans Fats In 1910, Procter & Gamble applied for a US patent on the use of hydrogenation for making a human-grade food product. Compared to the flowery, rhetorically brilliant hype it would later receive, the description was cool and clinical: This invention is a food product consisting of a vegetable oil, preferably cottonseed oil, partially hydrogenated, and hardened to a homogenous white or yellowish semi-solid closely resembling lard. The special object of the invention is to provide a new food product for a shortening in cooking. After a few failed attempts to claim a nameKrispo was taken by a cracker company; Cryst sounded religiousProcter and Gamble settled on Crisco, derived from crystallized cottonseed oil. The name would quite literally become a household term. Up until that point, a handful of processed vegetable oils had presence in Americabut unlike today, their claim to fame had nothing to do with being edible. In fact, stomachs were often the last place highly refined oils would end up. Peanut oil had gained some publicity as a potential fuel: one company managed to coax a small diesel engine into running on it during the 1900 Paris Exhibition. And cottonseed oil made its American debut back in 1768, when a Pennsylvania doctor figured out how to collect the fat from crushed cottonseedswhich he then used as a treatment for colic.. (Woe be to his patients, that crude oil was teeming with gossypola chemical that causes infertility, low blood potassium, and sometimes paralysis, and can only be removed from cottonseeds through heavy processing..) Ginning mills were thrilled someone wanted to haul away their cottonseed. Through much of the 1800s, the stuff had simply been left to rot in gin houses, or occasionally dumped illegally into rivers. But one mans trash had become another mans treasure, so to speak, and P&G had pioneered whats now an American tradition: getting rid of agricultural waste products by feeding them to humans. The company had effectively bridged the gap between garbage and food. By 1911, Crisco made its official debut. And what a debut it was. Almost immediately, the new fat had gained not only the nations trust, but also its passionate love. Within a year, over 2.5 million pounds of Crisco had flown off the shelves; by 1916, that number reached sixty million. How could a single product dominate the cooking world at warp speedrising from total obscurity into an indispensible staple in a matter of months? P&G had a back-patting answer for themselves: that housewives, chefs, doctors, and dieticians were glad to be shown a product which at once would make for more digestible foods, more economical foods, and better tasting foods. Crisco exploded onto the scene all on its own, was the implication. It was just that good! In reality, though, Criscos expedited fame was owed mainly to some of the most skillful, manipulative ad campaigns the young century had seen.. Knowing it would be hard to convince housewivesthe gatekeepers of Americas kitchensto give up their familiar lard and butter in exchange for this strange new item, P&G had hyped their product like few things had ever been hyped before. The company mailed samples to fifteen thousand grocers in America. Thousands of flyers were circulated among jobbers.12 The company deftly played upon womens burning desire to be modern, persuading them that clinging to animal fats in the face of this new scientific discovery would be akin to their grandmothers refusing to give up the spinning wheel. But most powerful of all was The Story of Criscoequal parts advertisement and cookbookwhich P&G handed out to housewives free of charge. Its 615 recipes, all united by their shared ingredient, Crisco, ranged from tantalizing (Clear Almond Taffy; Snow Pudding with Custard) to whimsical (Calf s Head Vinaigrette; Mushrooms Cooked Under Glass Bells). The true marketing genius, however, came from the books introductory chapters. Carefully grooming readers into future Crisco acolytes, the book first painted animal fats in the most dismal light possible, expounding their objectionable features and whetting appetites for a better replacement. Crisco was presented as a panacea of sortshealthier than lard, more economical than butter, and altogether in a category of its own. Everything other fats did wrong, Crisco did right. P&G managed to create a demand for something people hadnt even known they wanted. (As a peek into the different meat world of the day, the book was also busting with recipes for ox tongue, baked brains, heart, kidney omelets, sweetbreads (thats the more appetizing term for pancreas or thymus), stewed liver, and tripe (the rubbery lining of ruminant stomachs)all foods fit for an impressive supper back in the day. As well see in the upcoming Meet Your Meat chapter, the systematic purging of these foods from the modern menu has done us a great nutritional disservice.) In the wake of the grungy, repulsive world of meatpacking depicted in The Jungle, Crisco built its image on purity. Its factories were gleaming, sterile wonderlands. Its product was bright as snow. Its packaging included not only a tin can, but also an over-wrap of white paper, emphasizing its pristine state. Everything about the product screamed undefiled. Like the incorruptible relics of a saint, Crisco seemed eternally taintlessexactly what America, eager to wipe itself of the grime of the 1800s and enter a cleaner century, was hungry for. Incidentally, The Story of Crisco also captured a fascinating view of fat from the early 1900sa perspective that would face extinction once the USDA unleashed its smack down on all things lipid. In its chapter titled Mans Most Important Food, Fat, The Story of Crisco remarked, No other food supplies our bodies with the drive, the vigor, which fat gives. No other food has been given so little study in proportion to its importance. (Emphasis in original.) Back in the day, Crisco was indeed nothing short of a miracle. It came from plants; it was firm; it was tasty; it was cheap; it fried foods without smoking; and huzzah, it was even kosher and paravausable with both milk and meat per Jewish dietary law. (Rabbi Margolies of New York, who was in charge of approving the foods kosher label, remarked the Hebrew Race had been waiting four thousand years for Crisco.) It wasnt long before this new dietary messiah had infiltrated pantries, fryers, cakes, pies, omelets, meatloaves, and the very heart of Americas psyche. During World War II, butter rationing helped push Crisco and margarine to center stage, and oils from corn and soybean joined cottonseed oil as the slippery darlings of a new food technology. It wasnt long before science seemed to be cheering on the trend as well. In 1961, with the famous Ancel Keys now an iron-jawed board member, the American Heart Association (AHA) officially threw its weight behind the idea that saturated fat was causing heart diseaseimplying that P&Gs profit-driven corralling of Americans away from lard and butter had accidentally been good for their health. Around the same year, the nations margarine consumption exceeded butter intake for the first time in history. It seemed Crisco had done the impossible and lived up to its own unbridled hype. But there was a dark side to all this purity. With cottonseed oils omega-6 to omega-3 ratio registering a magnitude 258 to 1, Crisco became the first ingredient to unleash unprecedented levels of linoleic acida polyunsaturated fatinto the American diet. Unknown to even the sharpest nutritionists of the day, Crisco had invited two killers into the American diet: trans fat resulting from partially hydrogenating oils and an astronomical intake of omega-6 fatsboth now known to increase the risk of heart disease and cause inflammatory immune responses. It would be many decades before anyone realized what had gone so horribly wrong. In fact, the USDA would promote trans fats all the way up until 2005. But long before then, there had been growing suspicion that trans fats were fatal to our well-being. As early as the 1950s, while Ancel Keys was busy winning the world over to Team Anti-Saturated Fat, other researchers were noting the uncanny connection between the use of partially hydrogenated oils (and the trans fat they contained) and the rising rates of both heart disease and cancer.16 While correlation between the two couldnt prove causation any more than Keyss population data could conclusively damn saturated fat, the parallel between trans fat intake and chronic disease rates were beginning to ring some warning bells. Early research also suggested something awry about trans fats. By the 1960s, scientists realized that while vegetable oils were known to reduce cholesterol levels in controlled trials, the hydrogenated forms of those same oils failed to follow suit. In 1968, it was disconcerting enough for the American Heart Association (AHA) to take note and warn the public in a brochure titled Diet and Heart Disease: Partial hydrogenation of polyunsaturated fats results in the formation of trans forms which are less effective than cis forms in lowering cholesterol concentration. It should be noted that many currently available shortenings and margarines are partially hydrogenated and may contain little polyunsaturated fat of the natural cis,cis form.17 (Cis is a chemistry term meaning on this side, in this case referring to the configuration of atoms in unsaturated fat.) Despite fifteen thousand pamphlets going to print with a carefully worded demotion of trans fats, none of them would see the light of day. Thats because Fred Mattsona researcher gainfully employed by P&Gconvinced the AHAs medical director to remove all traces of those incriminating statements. Instead of distributing the thousands of copies theyd already printed, the AHA revised the brochure to make it more palatable to the margarine and shortening industries. Decades would pass before the AHA dragged trans fats back onto the cutting blockyears where countless lives were no doubt injured by ignorance of its dangers. Gag Order on Trans Fats Remember our conversation back in chapter two on Luise Light, the former USDA nutritionist whose plans for a new food guideone that would have cracked down on processed starches and sugars in favor of fresh, whole foodshad been so brutally mutated? As it happens, her shadowy safari through the agriculture department included a peek into the eras trans fat research. And what she saw was shocking. |
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The book sounds interesting. I'll see if my library has it. Thanks for
the recommendation. Tara |
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On Wednesday, July 30, 2014 1:55:25 PM UTC-7, Tara wrote:
> The book sounds interesting. I'll see if my library has it. Thanks for > > the recommendation. > > > > Tara It IS interesting. Fascinating in parts. |
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On Wed, 30 Jul 2014 12:48:44 -0700 (PDT), ImStillMags
> wrote: >This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm reading it right now, it's quite the tome. > >If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are interested. > >here is the link for the .99 offer. >http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX > >----------------------------------- > Major snippage Just bought it. Thanks. koko |
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![]() "ImStillMags" > wrote in message ... This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm reading it right now, it's quite the tome. If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are interested. here is the link for the .99 offer. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX ----------------------------------- Thanks for the link, I just downloaded it. Cheri |
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On Wednesday, July 30, 2014 8:05:44 PM UTC-5, Cheri wrote:
> "ImStillMags" > wrote in message > > ... > > This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm > > reading it right now, it's quite the tome. > > > > If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a > > short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are > > interested. > > > > here is the link for the .99 offer. > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX > > > > ----------------------------------- > > > > Thanks for the link, I just downloaded it. > I wonder how many of the folks here who have used trans-fatty shortenings in the past 10-15 years feel as stupid as they should. So many RFCers stuck up for Crisco. You know who you are. > > Cheri --Bryan |
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On Wednesday, July 30, 2014 7:13:04 PM UTC-7, Bryan-TGWWW wrote:
> On Wednesday, July 30, 2014 8:05:44 PM UTC-5, Cheri wrote: > > > "ImStillMags" > wrote in message > > > > > > ... > > > > > > This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm > > > > > > reading it right now, it's quite the tome. > > > > > > > > > > > > If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a > > > > > > short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are > > > > > > interested. > > > > > > > > > > > > here is the link for the .99 offer. > > > > > > http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX > > > > > > > > > > > > ----------------------------------- > > > > > > > > > > > > Thanks for the link, I just downloaded it. > > > > > I wonder how many of the folks here who have used trans-fatty shortenings > > in the past 10-15 years feel as stupid as they should. So many RFCers stuck > > up for Crisco. You know who you are. > > > > > > Cheri > > > > --Bryan I used it for years. I thought lard was bad and low fat hi carb was good. I'm no different than millions of people who believed the advertising. I'm just happy I've learned better over the last few years. My health reflects my awakening. I'm on the road to total recovery from the abuses of the standard American diet. Getting better every day. |
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BwrrrryanW wrote:
>Cheri wrote: >> "ImStillMags" wrote: >> >> This is an excerpt from "Death By Food Pyramid" by Denise Minger. I'm >> reading it right now, it's quite the tome. >> If you have a kindle, you can get this book right now for .99 but only for a >> short time. Not trying to sell books, but it's a great buy if you are >> interested. here is the link for the .99 offer. >> >> http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VOPE7YZNYB4NKX >> >> Thanks for the link, I just downloaded it. >> >I wonder how many of the folks here who have used trans-fatty shortenings >in the past 10-15 years feel as stupid as they should. So many RFCers stuck >up for Crisco. You know who you are. > >--Bwrrryan Not ten minutes ago I took a Dunkin Hines chocolate cake from the oven, pan greased with Crisco, I always grease cake pans with Crisco, nothing else works as well... if Bwrrrryan consumed Crisco orally rather than anally he might not be an IGNORANT faggot. |
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