by Mike Geary, Certified Nutrition Specialist, Certified Personal Trainer
Author of best-sellers: The Truth About 6-Pack Abs &
The Top 101 Foods that FIGHT Aging
I was on a weekend trip with some
friends recently and one of my friends was cooking breakfast for the
whole group. I went over to see what he was cooking and saw he was
getting ready to make a big batch of eggs.
Well, to my shock and horror, I
noticed that he was cracking the eggs open and screening the egg whites
into a bowl and throwing out the egg yolks. I asked him why the heck he
was throwing out the egg yolks, and he replied something like this...
"because I thought the egg yolks were terrible for you...that's where all the nasty fat and cholesterol is".
And I replied something along the lines of... "you mean that's where all of the nutrition is!"
This is a perfect example of how
confused most people are about nutrition. In a world full of
misinformation about nutrition, somehow most people now mistakenly think
that the egg yolk is the worst part of the egg, when in fact, the YOLK IS THE HEALTHIEST PART OF THE EGG! It's
a shame at how many restaurants you can walk into these days and see
that the "healthy" breakfast menu always has egg white items instead of
whole eggs. Are we really still in the "fat-phobic" 80's?
By throwing out the yolk and only
eating egg whites, you're essentially throwing out the most nutrient
dense, antioxidant-rich, vitamin and mineral loaded portion of the egg.
The yolks contain so many B-vitamins, trace minerals, vitamin A, folate,
choline, lutein, and other powerful nutrients... it's not even worth
trying to list them all.
In fact, the egg whites are almost devoid of nutrition compared to the yolks.
Even the protein in egg whites
isn't as powerful without the yolks to balance out the amino acid
profile and make the protein more bio-available. Not to even mention
that the egg yolks from free range chickens are loaded with healthy
omega-3 fatty acids.
Yolks contain more than 90% of the
calcium, iron, phosphorus, zinc, thiamin, B6, folate, and B12, and
panthothenic acid of the egg. In addition, the yolks contain ALL of the
fat soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K in the egg, as well as ALL of the
essential fatty acids (EFAs).
And now the common objection I get all the time when I say that the yolks are the most nutritious part of the egg...
"But I heard that whole eggs will skyrocket my cholesterol through the roof"
No, this is FALSE!
First of all, when you eat a food
that contains a high amount of dietary cholesterol such as eggs, your
body down-regulates it's internal production of cholesterol to balance
things out.
On the other hand, if you don't eat
enough cholesterol, your body simply produces more since cholesterol
has dozens of important vital functions in the body.
And here's where it gets even more interesting...
There have been plenty of studies lately that indicate that eating whole eggs actually raises your good HDL cholesterol to a higher degree than LDL cholesterol, thereby improving your overall cholesterol ratio and blood chemistry.
And 3rd... high cholesterol is NOT a
disease! Heart disease is a disease...but high cholesterol is NOT.
Cholesterol is actually a VERY important substance in your body and has
vitally important functions... it is DEAD WRONG to try to "lower your
cholesterol" just because of pharmaceutical companies propaganda that
everyone on the planet should be on statin drugs.
If you're interested in this topic
of cholesterol specifically, I have another article listed at the bottom
of this page about why trying to attack cholesterol is a mistake, and
what the REAL deadly risk factors actually are.
In addition, the yolks contain the
antioxidant lutein as well as other antioxidants which can help protect
you from inflammation within your body (the REAL culprit in heart
disease, not dietary cholesterol!), giving yet another reason why the
yolks are actually GOOD for you, and not detrimental.
To help bring even more proof that whole eggs are better for you than egg whites, I recently read a University of Connecticut
study that showed that a group of men in the study that ate 3 eggs per
day for 12 weeks while on a reduced carb, higher fat diet increased
their HDL good cholesterol by 20%, while their LDL bad cholesterol
stayed the same during the study. However, the group that ate egg
substitutes (egg whites) saw no change in either and did not see the
improvement in good cholesterol (remember that higher HDL levels are
associated with lower risk of heart disease) that the whole egg eaters
did.
So I hope we've established that whole eggs are not some evil food that will wreck your body... instead whole eggs are FAR superior to egg whites.
But what about the extra calories in the yolks?
This is actually a non-issue and
here's why... even though egg yolks contain more calories than just
eating the egg whites, the yolks have such a high micro-nutrient density
in those calories, that it increases your overall nutrient density per
calorie you consume. Essentially, what this does is help to regulate
your appetite for the remainder of the day, so you end up eating less
calories overall. In addition, the healthy fats in the egg yolks help
to maintain a good level of fat-burning hormones in your body.
Overall, this means that the extra fats (healthy fats) and calories from the yolk are so nutrient-dense that they actually HELP you to burn off body fat!
Also, your normal supermarket eggs
coming from mass factory farming just don't compare nutritionally with
organic free range eggs from healthy chickens that are allowed to roam
freely and eat a more natural diet. Your typical cheap grocery store
eggs will have lower nutrient levels and a higher omega-6 level and
lower omega-3 level. On the other hand, the cage-free organic eggs from
healthier chickens allowed to eat more natural feed and roam
freely will have much higher vitamin and mineral levels and a more
balanced healthier omega-3 to omega-6 fatty acid ratio.
I recently compared eggs I bought
at the grocery store with a batch of eggs I got at a farm stand where
the chickens were free roaming and healthy.
Most people don't realize that
there's a major difference because they've never bought real eggs from
healthy chickens... The eggs from the grocery store had pale yellow
yolks and thin weak shells. On the other hand, the healthier free range
eggs from the local farm had strong thick shells and deep orange colored
yolks indicating much higher nutrition levels and carotenoids... and
just a healthier egg in general.
This is due to the fact that a
free-roaming hen allowed to roam on plenty of land will eat a variety of
greens, insects, worms, etc transferring MUCH higher levels of
nutrients to the eggs compared to an unhealthy hen that is trapped
inside a dark factory farm hen house in horrible conditions and fed
nothing but piles of corn and soy. It's a DRASTIC difference in the nutrition that you get from the egg.
So next time a health or fitness
professional tells you that egg whites are superior (because of their
"fat-phobic" mentality towards dietary fats), you can quietly ignore
their advice knowing that you now understand the REAL deal about egg
yolks.
And can we all please STOP with this sillyness about eating an
omelete with 4-5 egg whites and only 1 egg yolk... If you want real
taste and real health benefits, we'd all be better off eating ALL of our
eggs with the delicious nutrient-dense yolks.
After all, do you REALLY think that our ancestors thousands of years
ago threw out the yolks and only ate the egg whites? NOT A CHANCE!
They intuitively knew that all of the nutrition was found in the yolks.
But our modern society has been brainwashed with misinformation about
fats and cholesterol.
Another interesting study about eggs...
I read a study recently that
compared groups of people that ate egg breakfasts vs groups of people
that ate cereal or bagel-based breakfasts. The results of the study
showed that the egg eaters lost or maintained a healthier bodyweight,
while the cereal/bagel eaters gained weight.
It was hypothesized that the egg
eaters actually ate less calories during the remainder of the day
because their appetite was more satisfied compared to the cereal/bagel
eaters who would have been more prone to wild blood sugar swings and
food cravings.
Oh, one last thing I almost
forgot... I personally eat 4 whole eggs almost every day with breakfast,
and I maintain single-digit bodyfat most of the year.
Enjoy your eggs and get a leaner body!
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