One of the most healthy          whole foods you can include in your diet is butter. 
"What?!" I can hear many of you saying,          "Isn't butter bad for you? I thought margarine          and spreads were better because they're low in saturated fat and cholesterol?"          
Be          not deceived folks!  
Butter is truly better than margarine or other vegetable          spreads. Despite unjustified warnings about saturated fat from well-meaning,          but misinformed, nutritionists,          the list of butter's benefits is impressive indeed:
Vitamins
Butter is a rich source of easily absorbed vitamin          A, needed for a wide range of functions in the body, from maintaining          good vision, to keeping the endocrine system in top shape. Butter also          contains all the other fat-soluble vitamins (E, K, and D).
Minerals
Butter is rich in          trace minerals, especially selenium, a powerful antioxidant.          Ounce for ounce, butter has more selenium per gram than either whole wheat          or garlic. Butter also supplies iodine, needed by the thyroid gland (as          well as vitamin A, also needed by the thyroid gland).
Fatty Acids
Butter has appreciable amounts of          butyric acid, used by the colon as an energy source. This fatty          acid is also a known anti-carcinogen.          Lauric acid, a medium chain fatty acid, is a potent antimicrobial and          antifungal substance. 
Butter also contains conjugated linoleic acid (CLA)          which gives excellent protection against cancer. Range-fed cows produce          especially high levels of CLA as opposed to "stall fed" cattle.
 It pays, then,          to get your butter from a cow that has been fed properly. 
Butter also has small, but equal, amounts of omega          3 and 6 fatty acids, the so-called essential fatty acids.
Glycospingolipids
These are a special category of fatty acids that protect          against gastrointestinal infections, especially in the very          young and the elderly. Children, therefore, should not drink skim or low          fat milk. Those that do have higher rates of diarrhea than those that          drink whole milk.
Cholesterol
Despite all of the misinformation you may have heard,          cholesterol is needed to maintain intestinal health, but is also needed          for brain and nervous system development in the young. Again,          this emphasizes the need for cholesterol-rich foods for children. Human          breast milk is extremely high in saturated fat and cholesterol.
Standing in direct opposition to all of these healthful          qualities stands margarine and assorted "vegetable oil spreads."          While these may be cheaper, you'd never eat them again if you knew how          they were made. 
All margarines are made from assorted vegetable oils          that have been heated to extremely high temperatures. This insures that          the oils will become rancid. After that, a nickel catalyst is added, along          with hydrogen atoms, to solidify it. Nickel is a toxic heavy metal and          amounts always remain in the finished product. Finally, deodorants and          colorings are added to remove margarine's horrible smell (from the rancid          oils) and unappetizing grey color.
And if that is not enough, in the solidification process,          harmful trans-fatty acids are created          which are carcinogenic and mutagenic. What would you rather          have: a real food with an abundance of healthful qualities or a stick          of carcinogenic, bleached, and deodorized slop? 
Some of you might be watching your weight and be rather          hesitant to add butter into your diet. Have no fear. About 15% of the          fatty acids in butter are of the short and medium chain variety which          are NOT stored as fat in the body,            but are used by the vital organs          for energy. 
When looking for good quality butter, raw          and cultured is best. This might be hard to find, however.          Organic butter is your next best thing, with store-bought butter being          at the bottom. Remember what we've said about commercially-raised cows;          its worth a few extra cents to get high quality butter for you and your          family. 
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