The Great Grease Bucket - Something from Nothing

February 22, 2009 on 11:29 am | In Healing Diets, Low-Carbohydrate Diets, Nourishing Traditional Recipes, Personal Stories, Saving Money, Urban Homestead, Weston A. Price Foundation |

When I started eating traditional nourishing foods, the biggest change in my life was reintroducing fat from an animal source into my diet.

As a child, I remember the grease bucket that sat beside the kitchen stove and was used anytime frying was required. It was continually refilled with grease from bacon, sausage and drippings from roasted meat. We never used vegetable oils and I remember making delicious biscuits from the grease.

The grease bucket disappeared from my family’s kitchen when I was about eight years old. The grease was thrown into the garbage and we started buying vegetable oils and margarine. At the time, the Canadian government recommended limiting saturated fat because it caused heart disease and cancer. Unfortunately, the outcome of these recommendations over the last 30 years has not been a reduction in heart disease and cancer.

In my search to improve my health, I found there was great controversy about saturated fat even causing heart disease and cancer. Of course, I couldn’t believe that such a basic nutritional fact could be wrong. It took months before I could seriously consider that my dogmatic beliefs about saturated fat might be wrong.

The arguments are complex. It appears the basic error was traditional saturated fats became the villain in a complex misinterpretation of modern “new fangled” fats and industrial vegetable oils.

There is some great writing on this topic, and I believe it is best to go to the source of information and make your own informed choice. If you are Confused About Fats, the Weston A. Price Foundation has some excellent essays.

Dr. Mary Enig, a renowned lipid specialist, wrote a book called Know Your Fats which is a great primer for understanding fats. Thirty years ago, she was one of the first scientists to raise the alarm about trans fatty acids and advocated for labeling. Know Your Fats is available in the Kamloops Public Library.

Update August 4, 2009: I have had a number of people ask me about the title of this blog. I guess it was my attempt at a pun. “Something from Nothing” is what a frugal housewife would get when she went to the trouble to save drippings from roasted meats, sausages and bacon. “Something from Nothing” is what the Vegetable Oil Companies created when they convinced everyone that the grease bucket was unhealthy and would cause disease or possibly death.

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  1. [...] use. Fats from animals can take high heat frying much better than even butter which can burn. Read The Grease Bucket and Beautiful Bone Broth for more information. Coconut oil is safe for cooking but save your extra [...]

    Pingback by eatkamloops.org » Cooking with Grass-Fed Meat and Fowl — October 13, 2009 #

  2. [...] meat and fowl. Use the grease for any high heat frying or roasting. For more information read The Grease Bucket - Something from Nothing. 7. If you eat industry vegetable oils or foods containing industry vegetable oil, stop now. For [...]

    Pingback by eatkamloops.org » 25 Steps to Eating Nourishing Traditional Foods — November 3, 2009 #

  3. [...] The Weston A. Price Foundation does not support the Lipid Hypothesis. This is part of an email correspondence with someone interest in the views of the Weston A. Price Foundation on saturated fat and it’s evil twin cholesterol: I have written very little about cholesterol on eatkamloops.org. This is mainly because of embarrassment. I completely believed the Lipid Hypothesis. It was very hard for me to admit I could be so wrong. The only writing I can find is The Grease Bucket - Something from Nothing. [...]

    Pingback by eatkamloops.org » Cholesterol: Foe or Friend — November 7, 2009 #

  4. [...] even several lifetimes. For more information about collecting your own animal fats please read The Great Grease Bucket - Something from Nothing. “Something from Nothing” is what a frugal housewife would get when she went to the trouble to [...]

    Pingback by eatkamloops.org » My Mother’s Dutch Oven — April 3, 2010 #

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