Getbig Bodybuilding, Figure and Fitness Forums
Getbig Bodybuilding Boards => Nutrition, Products & Supplements Info => Topic started by: muscle19 on January 21, 2008, 08:19:36 PM
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Ok, shed some light on this for me. Everything we eat seems to have partially hydrogenated oils in it and I bet that most people on this board consumes them too. Now, I know they are mainly trans fats, what if the product I'm eating has the partially hydrogentated oils but no trans fat, how bad is it still on the body?
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if its not a trans-fat then its not a trans-fat...plain and simple.
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Ok, shed some light on this for me. Everything we eat seems to have partially hydrogenated oils in it and I bet that most people on this board consumes them too. Now, I know they are mainly trans fats, what if the product I'm eating has the partially hydrogentated oils but no trans fat, how bad is it still on the body?
Partially hydrogenated oil IS a trans fat. There is absolutely no healthy reason to include anything in the diet that contains hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated fat/oil.
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I'm sure everyone here eats this stuff but why does it say in the ingrediants its in the product but there's no trans fat?
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I'm sure everyone here eats this stuff but why does it say in the ingrediants its in the product but there's no trans fat?
If it's fully hydrogenated, then it's a saturated fat. Typically they'll write "partially hydrogenated" if it has trans fats, and hydrogenated if they took it all the way to a saturated fat.
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But if it says it has partially hydrogenated oils but in the nutrition colum has 0 trans fat and VERY low fat content in general, where's the trans fat? I'm confused by this
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But if it says it has partially hydrogenated oils but in the nutrition colum has 0 trans fat and VERY low fat content in general, where's the trans fat? I'm confused by this
Food manufacturers are allowed to list amounts of trans fat with less than 0.5 gram (1/2 g) as 0 on the Nutrition Facts label.