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Peer Reviewed

Healthy Fats

Nutritional Pearls: The Oil You Cook With Matters

A 37-year-old woman, who is a mother of 3 young children, cooks dinner for her family most nights. At a recent check-up, she asks you if it really matters if she cooks with plant-based oils or oils made from animal fat.

How do you advise your patient?

(Answer and discussion on next page)


Dr. Gourmet is the definitive health and nutrition web resource for both physicians and patients with evidence-based resources including special diets for warfarin users, patients with GERD/acid reflux, celiac disease, type 2 diabetes, low sodium diets (1500 mg/d), and lactose intolerance. 

Timothy S. Harlan, MD, is a board-certified internist and professional chef who translates the Mediterranean diet for the American kitchen with familiar, healthy recipes. He is an assistant dean for clinical services, executive director of The Goldring Center for Culinary Medicine, associate professor of medicine at Tulane University in New Orleans, and faculty chair of the Certified Culinary Medicine Specialist program.

Answer: The oil you cook with matters. It is better to cook with plant-based oils vs those made from animal fat, and specifically, those oils higher in monounsaturated rather than saturated fats.

Olive oil is 1 of the 9 points of the Mediterranean Diet, except that's really a sort of shorthand for consuming more monounsaturated fats than saturated fats.1 In my culinary medicine cooking classes, that usually means we're talking about the kinds of fats people use in cooking, whether we're spreading the fat on bread, such as butter or margarine, or for sautéing or frying, such as canola oil or olive oil.

Clinical guidelines for a Mediterranean-style diet emphasize a 1 to 1.6 ratio of saturated to monounsaturated fats. That is, ideally you should consume at least 1.6 teaspoons of monounsaturated fats to every teaspoon of saturated fat.

I don't know about you, but on a day-to-day basis most people I know are not going to obsessively measure every fat in search of that perfect ratio. Instead, I focus on using unsaturated fats whenever I can and using saturated fats only where I will get the best flavor bang for my buck. Often that means using olive oil or other plant-based oils to sauté instead of butter, while still using a small amount of butter to finish sauces.

The Research

Instead of looking at saturated vs unsaturated fats in people's diets, a team of researchers in China took a high-level approach, assessing the types of oils used in cooking and relating those oils with the risk of death from all causes.2

The China Health and Nutrition Survey is an ongoing prospective study of over 7000 Chinese households in 9 provinces that first began collecting data in 1989 and has continued through 2011 with multiple surveys of the originating, as well as replacement households for those who declined to participate or were lost to follow-up. Just over 14,000 adults were included in the analysis for today's research.

Multiple 3-day food diaries were included in the data collection for each household. In addition, trained researchers visited each household and weighed and recorded all foods in the home, from sugar to meats over a 3-day period. Interviews with individual family members allowed the researchers to identify all foods consumed away from the home as well.

Given the record of the amount and type of oils used over the 3-day data collection period, the researchers were able to estimate each individual person's average intake of the cooking oils used. The most used plant-based cooking oils were peanut oil, canola oil, soybean oil, and "salad oil" (a blend of plant-based oils). "Lard" was the animal cooking oil most frequently used.

The authors grouped individual cooking oil intakes into 3 increasing levels of consumption, then compared the cooking oil(s) intake of the 1006 people who passed away during the study's duration with those who did not.

The Results

You might expect that those who cooked with the greatest amount of animal cooking oils would have a higher risk of dying from any cause. In this analysis, however, there was no statistically significant increase in the risk of death once the authors considered age, sex, education, smoking status, physical activity, presence of chronic conditions, and other variables.

On the other hand, those who consumed the greatest amount of plant-based cooking oils, regardless of type, were as much as 65% less likely to die of any cause.

Somewhat surprisingly, peanut oil appeared to be the most protective plant-based, conferring a reduction in risk of death of 41%.

A closer look at the categories of intake, however, reveals that the highest tertial of animal-based oil intake was at least 22.1 grams per 2000 calories per day, while the highest tertial of plant-based cooking oil intake was at least 35.4 grams per 2000 calories per day. That statistically insignificant relationship between animal-based oil intake and risk of death could well be due to their lower overall consumption.

What’s the Take Home?

This is interesting, but I wouldn't take this as endorsing any plant-based oil when used for stir-frying, which is how oils are most used in China. I would instead add this to the pile of evidence we already have for preferring plant-based oils for cooking over those made from animal fat and specifically those oils higher in monounsaturated rather than saturated fats.

References:

  1. Wu F, Mao L, Zhuang P, Chen X, Jiao J, Zhang Y. Plant-sourced cooking oil consumption is associated with lower total mortality in a longitudinal nationwide cohort study. Clin Nutr. 2020;39(12):3703-3710. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clnu.2020.03.031
  2. Harlan TS. The Mediterranean Diet. Dr Gourmet. Accessed September 27, 2021. https://www.drgourmet.com/mediterraneandiet/oils.shtml