As a small farmer who previously sold eggs for years, I have stopped selling them because of the pressure from government health bodies over Avian Flu. Small farmers are targets for these authorities, and these health authorities are ruthless when it comes to how they operate. When you care for your chickens like we do, it just isn't worth the risk. What I advocate is for every household who eat a lot of eggs to get some backyard hens. Regarding a chicken's carbon footprint - they create a net positive if you consider that you can feed 2-3 hens with just what goes into your compost in a week, that is trucked outside the city and dumped. It is also the best way of KNOWING that what is in your eggs. The industrial egg industry is very unscrupulous when it comes to feed, and yes, that even includes "free range" chickens. If you can't visit the chickens on the farm, there is a chance you are being fed just marketing speak. So get yourself some backyard hens for the best eggs, and take your food security into your own hands.
I have thought about raising chickens for food, but I could not bring myself to slaughter an animal, and yes I do think about it when buying it in the store, but at least I did not do it myself
Sad that so many farmers have had to give up poultry farming, and that so many birds have died. I am a big fan of good eggs - they are a great breakfast for sleep because they contain tryptophan, which helps us to create serotonin. and melatonin, which help us to relax and sleep.
@@maxineadderley5378 An egg laying chicken can provide much more over the course of it's lifetime than one for meat. For protein alone, a single hen can give you 5000 grams of protein over a lifetime vs. 125g for the carcass. You can also benefit from manure and grow some veg in your garden.
@@maxineadderley5378Paying someone to kill an animal for you is no better than killing an animal yourself. You sound like a good person with good morals. Unfortunely, your actions don't align to your morals
i come from the middle east and we'd never heard anything like that growing up. we were always told eggs are good for us and will make us strong. fear mongering around food in the us and uk is terrifying, especially considering they produce most of the worlds research in english. would love to see more interviews from people from other cultures.
I have been eating 6 days a day for the past 3 years, mostly weekdays. So that's 30 eggs a week. Free range. But then prices of eggs in Malaysia is relatively cheap compared to western countries. My lipid profile is good, I'm in better health than in my 20s, I'm almost 50 now. Body fat % around 12%. Very low visceral fat.
I have my own chickens and I can really recommend having chickens in your own backyard. Its not a lot of work and its lovely to know where your egg comes from and be a little self-sufficient. Since having my own chickens, a lot of older people told me that it used to be really normal that everyone used the little bit of land they got to have their own chickens and eggs, so I think it would be wondeful if that found a comeback. Better for the chickens and better eggs for everyone who loves to eat them!
I have a few too. The ethics get a bit complicated when you think “where have the roosters gone?” but it very easy to give a few backyard birds an excellent quality of life.
Home grown eggs, fed with whatever is around the house + kitchen waste...omg, nothing better, can spot the difference straight away with supermarket eggs, particularly the jumbos and megas that are very floury.
I’ve just bought my eggs, direct from the farm, I’ve seen the lovely, friendly chickens, they seem happy and very well cared for. Gorgeous eggs, newly laid today. I always test using the water test. They never float, always lie sideways. Cheaper than supermarket eggs. £2.40 per dozen. I’m very happy. 😊🥚
This is getting far too complicated, i thought it was carrots that made us happy, not eggs. Would you be equally as "very happy", if you got a dozen carrots for £2.40?
I try and find local eggs that are not corn fed, just free to grub around. Apparantly if hens don't feed on their natural foods the good nutrition in eggs is depleted. Its more difficult with the present avian flu as even free range hens are not free to roam and my local farm has to feed them corn. I can't keep hens unfortunately as I have no garden. I am on keto and eat 3-4 eggs a day. I have just had my yearly blood work done and I am fine on everything. This was a great podcast, very balanced.
Happy to see this video as I sat down to a plate of shakshuka with a side of beans instead of toast. I had two since I don't eat eggs every day. Eggs are lovely to have on hand
Loved this! I've been eating eggs on regular basis for years. They are also excellent for brain health as they contain an important nutrient called choline Go for organic if you can, as they contain much more nutrients which is down to the natural diet of the chicken. They are relatively cheap and a powerhouse of nutrients. 🐔 😚
I have switched to Organic eggs, but not for nutritional reasons. Organic means smaller flock sizes and better welfare for the hens. The UK government at some point in the last 12 years lowered the standards required for eggs to be free range, a step I was appalled by.
Thank you for the clarity on the issue. I eat 3 eggs a day and I weight train and cycle. And the only source of cholesterol in my diet is via the eggs and the issue cholesterol always plagues my mind about eggs and if I'm doing the right thing eating them. I am aware of the density of nutrients in the egg but them always weighing the the negative effects of the cholesterol.
In the late 80s I did a fitness trainer program. The bloke who taught the nutrition part happened to be a competitive power lifter and work in a lab. He tried increasing his egg intake and track his biomarker on how well he would digest it. Which he could do conveniently in the lab he worked at. He told us that in a hard training phase he could consume up to 12 eggs a day without showing any negative impact on his markers.
I found this very confusing: -"Dietary cholesterol does not affect blood cholesterol." -"Don't have more than one egg, or maybe two per day. More than this is too much dietary cholesterol, which affects blood cholesterol." I'm paraphrasing something she said several times.
Has anyone been offered an egg white omelette 😂 wtf is this? You guys are talking about chicken eggs. Currently with bird flu we are all realising that confining thousands of birds isn't really the ethical answer in the 21st century. Have a tofu scramble instead. Tofu never started a pandemic.
The difference is between short and long term/chronic impacts. In normal individuals, eating foods with low-to-moderate amounts of sugar, cholesterol, or salt don't substantially increase the risk of diabetes, high cholesterol, or high blood pressure, respectively. They can, however, cause temporary spikes in readings of blood sugar, cholesterol, and blood pressure, respectively, which is normal, and in healthy individuals those readings return to baseline after digestion. People who have existing health conditions or risks do need to be more careful, as Dr. Berry said, because you can spike already elevated levels, and in some people dietary sources do carry higher risk. It's easy to get this stuff confused - it's why we've had decades of seemingly conflicting advice on what not to eat - but the high-quality evidence is more or less saying the same thing. It's just not always easy to communicate this in brief ways.
I looked at science that show that if your LDL cholesterol is as low as it should be, eating cholesterol has a rather strong influence on your LDL. So the effect on your LDL is small only if LDL is already too high . Edit: That was not completely correct, it is not about the LDL levels per se, it is about how much cholesterol you have previously eaten. So if you regularly eat a lot of cholesterol the extra effect on LDL is rather small, but it can rise dramatically if you have a habit of eating very little or no cholesterol.
Exactly. She smoothly avoids that inconvenient detail - like a seasoned used car dealer selling you a lemon. Sad to think how many people watching will be taken in.
@@EdwardLindon okay, let me qualify my comment. one could argue that her omission is not an intentional deception but merely negligence and incompetence. Either way, she is culpable for misleading viewers who are unaware that when she refers to “normal” cholesterol levels, she doesn’t mean normal as in “okay” or “sufficient” - rather , she means the highly elevated cholesterol levels that are “normal” to people consuming a standard American diet (SAD). It’s an important difference,
@@zodd67 Yes, why eat eggs when you can eat something nutritious with fiber and phytonutrients instead? I would say everything is a matter of comparison.
I've moved over to 2 eggs per day and reduced the amount of carbs right down. I'm enjoying 2 fried or poached eggs on half an avocado. (with salad, tomatoes and kimchee/sauerkraut.) . I think it's helping with my joints aches.
There still seems to be a lot of fear mongering here. There is no evidence that eggs are bad for us, so why the artificial limit of one-a-day? It's the about the cheapest quality protein, even now, so whatever you replace that second or third egg with will either be not as good, or much more expensive. If this advice would have someone who enjoys an omelette for breakfast, only having it 2 or 3 times a week, and eating toast or a bowl of cereal the other mornings - has it improved their health, or actually made it worse, with elevated blood glucose most mornings.
I would add that food-based cholesterol does affect your blood cholesterol, it just varies by individual. Years ago, I had a very rich dinner before an annual check-up the next day, and my bad cholesterol was up almost 50 points. Being mindful back to my normal diet since then, and my blood cholesterol came back down to its normal range in subsequent years. Nothing else I can recall was different.
So your body’s mechanisms went to work, sending out the taxis to collect stuff to take back to the liver, and worked pretty hard, hence the change in numbers. Well done, your body works and cholesterol scaremongering is a load of twaddle.
Love your presentations! I'm a dietitian and diabetes educator in Australia and must admit that I plagiarise parts of some of your talks with my patients. Thankyou Zoe for making it so easy for me to stay up to date. Please come to Australia soon!!
Hope you aren't still advocating the Standard Australian Diet (SAD) with lots of carbs. Dietitians are to blame for a lot of misinformation, given that the guidelines are out of date, and your organisation is funded by Big Food.
@Betty Amber more than a billion male chicks are disposed of each year because they have no value. Watch the disposal on you tube and then say you have no ethical issues.
As a professional bodybuilder now 60 yrs of age… i eat 4-6 whole eggs , mostly 4 eggs a day every day. I know the nutrition value of the egg. Besides, i also know that cholesterol is not a problem based on what the top doctors have said about having high LDL. I am in great shape and health. On zero medications. I work out 4- days a week and do cardio up the mountains 2-3 a week. By diet is getting better as i am slowly studying all about farmed salmon and processed food which now i stay away from.If you exercise even walk everyday and watch your by eating healthy carbs you can eat pretty much till your full. People don’t want to exercise.
I am shocked by the lack of rigorous science on Zoe. The recent egg studies are largely sponsored by the egg industry, Further more the high saturated fat causes heart diseae.
Not to mention the cruelty of the egg industry. Why would you eat eggs when there are so many other plant based foods that are not only much healthier but much kinder to animals.
@@nickarrizza one large egg has 1.5g of saturated fat. I suggest you go broader in your research than Dr Barnard. If you don't want to eat eggs for humane reasons I completely understand. I was just letting you know the bit about saturated fat is not true. Have a great day 😊
I’m American. I eat three eggs in the morning, five days a week and sometimes on the weekend. I work in a greenhouse and am generally active (though I do not exercise). I have no cholesterol or cardiovascular issues and actually have trouble putting on weight. I was vegan for seven years, and eggs are what my diet was lacking. Hard to believe that folks view them negatively. But doctors are full of shit. They parrot what they’re told by industry group, and rarely if ever take a critical look at what they’re fed by government or industry sources. They’re only use is emergency services.
@@dianalivingconsciously9013 I LOL'd, but maybe it's cos of the situation there with for-profit doctors. OR it's like when people feel the need to preface every statement with something like, "As a mom..." 😀
Great to hear. I've had amazing results eating more fat, fewer carbs and intermittent fasting. I enjoy eggs but currently only have two a week. I shall increase the amount I eat now.
You could probably have 2 a day without any problem really. ( there are medical conditions where this isn't true though, but those are .... medical conditions )
@@richardjackson5380 There is nothing wrong with eating one or two eggs a day. It's one of the healthiest proteins you can eat. Just make sure they're pasture raised or have your own chickens. Watch the video "What'll Happen to You If You Start Eating 3 Eggs a Day?"
I think her point was a reasonable amount of dietary cholesterol is acceptable for healthy people but high amounts could be dangerous for people with lipid issues
She said "dietary cholesterol has little effect on blood cholesterol". That is possibly disingenuous as it can be both true and false. Blood serum cholesterol can be expressed as a sigmoidal curve, whereby if you're in the upper region, additional dietary cholesterol doesn't push you higher. If you're in the lower ranges, dietary cholesterol absolutely pushes up blood serum cholesterol. Basically at a certain point, blood serum cholesterol 'tops out' and won't necessarily go higher. Only half the story is presented in this video. Her statement is accurate only where higher blood serum cholesterol is preexisting. The full picture is more nuanced.
This 100%. Thanks for saying this... i don't get why people always pick half the info they like and fits their story, and leave out the rest. I guess that is what they call cherry picking...
If you already have high cholesterol, you’re just adding to a problem. At medium levels you may be pushing yourself up to the problem range, if you have low cholesterol feel free to eat them. I was told that egg yolk contains the cholesterol and that I’m free to use the whites. He didn’t establish her credentials either.
Exactly!! Thank you 💚 plus there are some very important reasons for us a to be transitioning away from animal products in took plant-based diet besides health.. there's land use greenhouse gas and animals rights... I won't get into it all in detail here but animal agriculture has got to go... Plant strong ✌️💚
@@trotskyite1 exactly.. and there's definitely a huge amount of cognitive distance at play here with most of our current world population on subjects black animal. For the same reason a lot of our are in denial about what the oil and gas industry is doing.. it's very similar but more people are connected to animal agriculture.. so that's why more people are experiencing cognitive dissonance about it then oil and gas.. it is so obvious when you look at statistics of surveys or even populations of people that vote one way or the other in different states or provinces that people are hugely bias to whatever it is that they're comfortable with and don't want to change he'll deny the science on it and skew the data and favour some of the outliers or industry-funded studies
Years ago, I tested a bit high for cholesterol. I was told to adjust my diet and on no account to eat eggs. Then we had the 'Egwina Curry' scandal, when the Secretary of State for Agriculture etc, announced that most British eggs contained salmonella. No wonder my generation then developed the mindset that eggs are bad for you.
@@indranidasgupta8982 I've been in Britain. Most garbage bins are drowned in empty packages of breakfast cereal. They like sugary stuff. Eggs probably are not the culprit.
@@TTR83 I've heard that too... I have family in the UK and one cousin and his family exclusively does keto, but the other is more varied. But I know in general, the UK population is big into carbs... refined and processed carbs.
Great information Sarah & Jonathan! I only eat eggs when I go out to a cafe for breakfast and can't find a vegan option (i.e. a burrito of mainly rice, beans, vegetables, and salsa). I'm not a strict vegan at this time (I eat a few small tins of fish a couple times a week, so I suppose I'm a pescatarian), but this information helps alleviate a lot of my concerns about eggs. I will probably just keep it at 3 eggs per week due to my environmental & welfare concerns for chickens, but I won't be overly concerned about eating a few more eggs at times. Thanks!
I recently got done reading Lisa mosconi's Brain Food book, and she recommends about 3 eggs per week for brain function. Same with fish. Veg and whole grains in abundance, some fermented food for microbial activity.
My egg consumption has never wavered. I don't necessarily have eggs every day, but that is only because I have a variety of foods available. The number I have at any one time can vary depending what I'm eating as my meal/ A 5 egg omelette,3 hard boiled eggs with mayonaise, or 2 with a salad. 1 or 2 fried eggs with bacon and /or sausages. How many do I eat a week? That depends on what I fancy to eat and when - anything from zero upwards
I hope you comment on the negative impact that some may experience from eggs based on their gut microbiome. Dr Greger reported the research regarding TMAO
Eggs have a lot of choline, which gets transformed to trimethylamine in certain microbiome, then gets oxidized to TMAO in the liver, and that substance circulates around the body as a cardio-toxin until it is eliminated. Cue the next egg to be consumed, and TMAO reappears again.
Each day I have 4 eggs for breakfast and 2 in the evening before bed. That includes 2 yolks and 6 whites. I'm 65 and have no health issues beyond low thyroid.
This is so informative. I remember the shortage back in February and seeing all these elderly folks standing around the area where you picked up the eggs in the store. It was then that I realized that many of our elderly population in the USA eat eggs more so then meat because of the cost. When I became a vegetarian I started looking at where my food came from. Range free eggs are harder to get in my area and extremely expensive when they are there, so I opt for cage free eggs. Thanks for the video.
Very good to discuss this topic although I have a few questions. Why isn't it better explained what scientific findings at the time proclaimed eggs were bad? How is it possible that the scientific findings of then and now are so at odds with each other? 2. Why is no attention paid to the saturated fatty acids in eggs or are they no longer harmful too? I think these are two aspects that are so obvious and yet they are hardly discussed.
Before recently I was eating four eggs almost every day and was surprised to find my cholesterol is normal. My problem isn't eggs, meat or other protein, it's carbs. My doctor encouraged me to eat more lean meat (such as burger without bread and so forth). Of course moderation is still important though.
I know I'm not the only one who's had enough of the back and forth between the different groups who have their own agendas. I've been living with diabetes since 1998 and haven't spent a night in the hospital yet! I have to think about diet and weight management and health more than the people who are still in good health and probably still taking their health for granted. "They" scared people off of eggs because of saturated fat and cholesterol because of the belief that those things lead to heart disease. They told people to eat oatmeal and drink orange juice. Then millions of people became overweight type 2 diabetics from all the sugars/starches/grains etc. Now many people are slimming down on low carb high fat diets but even the cardiologists don't agree if that is foolish long term even if it is working in the short term for slimming down and getting better control of the high blood sugar problem. Then you have the vegans who are almost more concerned about the animals than they are their own long term health. Then you have the worthless government who lets the big companies "mislead" people about what things like "cage free" actually mean. The companies take advantage of the people who do care about the animals and the environment but still do believe that homosapiens need to eat meat/eggs/dairy etc to be well nourished. I'm a reader and it's not even all completely clear to me what is the "right" thing to do and when it is or isn't worthwhile to agree to pay more for "pasture raised" etc. So what in the bleep can you expect from people who aren't inclined to put much thought into these matters?
I agree it is a nightmare to get straight true information. Every UA-camr is probably biased, selling their book. diet plans, supplements, or just channel subscribers. Half truths from most, just the bits that support their ideas. Worse we can not trust governmental advice either as they have been wrong and/or do not correct advice when things change from better research. Plus all the supposedly 'good' stuff is always the expensive stuff.
@@nicholaspostlethwaite9554 Are you in the USA like me or elsewhere? During the quarantine I started watching more tv than I normally would just to pass the time. I watched some of the guru book sellers on PBS and their books are in the library. They are all claiming that they keep up on all the latest studies and are trying to summarize things for "average" people and address some of the myths etc. But they are all giving different diet advice. The one doctor is for the vegan diet and the other one is not. Some of those guys are on the QUACKWATCH list. People tend to think they can trust what is on PBS and what is in the library. My mom was watching Dr Amen the Psychiatrist. If you Google him some mental health professionals have said he is a huckster! He's made millions. Everyone has an agenda it seems.
@@jackschitt6235 No I am in the UK. Far less if anything on tv here it is on line like here, that all these vested interest 'hucksters' seem to gather. It amazes me anyone buys these books many have. Overall it is a failure of central governments to study and make such videos or even books themselves. Advised by the best national scientists, and presented by competent presenters, accepting most scientists are not good at presentation, it's not their 'job' skill. This information stream should also debunk misinformation regularly. It is like Government and science organisations, have not noticed the internet and how people look for information! Even medics, doctors, GPs in UK, seem largely out of touch and just ticking boxes for an easy life.
You may not care about cramping hens in smelly overcrowded prisons 24/7 to produce their menstrual product for you to enjoy, but this article is about another substance you should be aware of for health: www.clevelandheartlab.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Taking-a-Closer-Look-at-TMAO-CHL-D077.pdf
Eggs are the true superfood, especially paired with butter, another superfood! Don't believe the garbage about fat and cholesterol, two things that keep us alive.
As a kid in the 1960’s I remember the “Go to work on an egg” TV advert fronted by Tony Hancock, I even had a badge with the slogan on. It was not in the 1950’s.
I have Typ 2, keep fit, BMI 23, and perfect blood pressure. One Dr says do not eat eggs and the other says eat eggs, when I found I have Typ 2, I started to eat up to 24 eggs per week, then found my Cholesterol had gone up to 5. I have since changed to having Two Chicks Egg whites in omelets 5 x per week and on weekends have 4 x full eggs, my cholesterol has reduced. So now the Dr who wants me to eat full eggs is really pushing Statins, I just do not get it, I walk hard 3 to 4 miles per night, and do 5-mile walks on weekends, doing loads of press ups, sit ups etc, the information is confusing, but I have decided no matter how hard they push, I do not want to take the statins. The last bit is nothing to do with eggs, but just to show the confusion :)
As soon as you get your D2 under control, it's like they say "oh damn, now what can we push on him/her". I've refused Statins in writing and they STILL try to push them on me.
I agree generally. It is not that it is confusing, it is that the supposed experts whose jobs are in the health area and ought to know and understand these issues a lot easier than me, not only say different things they appear not to know. Perhaps the truth is none of it is true, its all guess work, but careers depend on them sounding confident of having the right answer to the patients. My GP wants me on statins too. Way higher than you at 8 last time. Just not interested or able to say why it is high though, never even ask what I eat. Just box ticking to push statins. BMI 21. HbA1c last time 38 non diabetic range. Diabetic, original Hospital consultant said tp1, (late onset) am using insulin, noticed GP notes say tp2. These experts just guess it seems. So what chance of a UA-camr having anything right?
Focussing on 'complete protein' is not necessary since if you eat different proteins within a day - some studies show over 2 days - the body uses and combines them anyway.
Demolishing them s such a waste- better to eat them in moderation. Eighteen a week sounds to eat. One is one too many to demolish. Protect the egg. Eggs are pure.
It’s interesting that this happens with some experts saying it is not a problem (in the absence of systemic inflammation) and others saying it is a significant warning sign.
I would really love to see you bring on Dr. Greger and have a debate. Because he's reviewing all of the research and you are reviewing the research and both are coming up with polar opposite conclusions and recommendations.
@genomedia44: In the youtube search bar type in "sugar industry fat" and a ton of videos will result explaining the story of the sugar industry going after the saturated fat industry and winning. We're all still suffering from this problem.
Thanks Zoe for another useful video on nutrition. I used to believe that eggs were “bad” because of previous guidance and this was compounded by the results of a food intolerance test that showed me to have high intolerance to apricots and egg whites. I stopped eating both though not always possible to completely avoid egg whites. Now I know that egg whites are a “complete” protein I’m wondering if I should ignore my intolerance result…
The ‘food intolerance test’ may be unreliable. If however you notice adverse effects yourself from eating egg whites then there are plenty of other sources of protein
So really it's disturbing that the information given by professionals is so contradictory that the rest of us who are not educated in this field a completely lost
Thank you. Cruelty is also involved in free range egg production (notably, the killing of male chicks and fictitious claims of freedom: refs PETA 2023 and Veganuary 2016)
Like any animal food consumption, this is a truth we have to accept if we believe that doing so is desirable and/or necessary for optimal human health. It us a truth nonetheless.
The latest independent studies shows that the HIGH in saturated fats and cholesterol in egg yolks DO raise your risk of heart disease. Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death.
@@rebanelson607 I get my information on the latest nutrition studies from the non profit UA-cam channel NutritionFacts by Dr. Greger. You would will find the links to the clinical studies there.
One reason for a decline in egg consumption not mentioned in the video was the salmonella scare, in the UK at least. Edwin Currie, as a health minister, scared the bejesus out of the population by saying the bacterium was present in just about all chickens.
Edwina Curry. Resigned December 16th 1988. British egg industry decimated. My dad picked me up from university for Xmas on that day- I remember it very well.
Edwina Curry did not say 'almost all chickens had salmonella'. She said ALMOST all egg PRODUCTION was CONTAMINATED.. It was the media who spread the MYTH that she said all chickens and eggs had salmonella!
I keep my own chickens and generally eat 4+ eggs a day and have done for well over a decade. With the exception of cholesterol every single health marker is excellent even by the conventional medical standards and reference ranges. Cholesterol is only one risk factor of heart disease, and should be taken into account along with all the others, but because it was easily measurable it has become the default for many doctors. After both of my last two annual medicals my G.P. has highlighted concern over my slightly high total cholesterol and LDL. However, both my last lipid panels were essentially the same: Fasting status:Fasting Cholesterol:6.1 mmol/L ( < 5.0 ) H Triglyceride:0.8 mmol/L ( < 2.0 ) HDL Cholesterol:1.54 mmol/L ( > 1.00 ) LDL cholesterol:4.2 mmol/L ( < 3.4 ) H Chol/HDL Ratio:4.0 ( < 4.5 ) Comment:For most patients non-fasting lipids are acceptable for CVD risk assessment, as Chol/HDL ratio is not affected. For established CVD risk (including diabetes) NZGG optimal levels are Cholesterol < 4.0, LDL < 2.0 and Chol/HDL ratio < 4.0. From my reading of published research papers on cholesterol and the formulae used to calculate LDL-C, the low triglycerides throw out most of the formulae, which adjusted for reduces the LDL-C slightly but still above the high end of the range. However, it is my understanding that the fact the TG is low and HDL-C is high indicates my high LDL-C is not a concern as this pattern is consistent with the LDL-C being of the large buoyant type rather than the dangerous small dense LDL kind.
My husband (60) and 2 adult sons in their mid twenties each have very healthy diets, drink a lot of water, do yoga, lift weights at the gym and may go for a long run once a week. As well as active lifestyles. For 4 + years they each eat 3-4 eggs every morning. Filled with fresh chopped veggies (broccoli/asparagus/garlic/onions/peppers and either turkey sausage or ham about 1/4 each serving or less then top with freshly grated cheese. The “kids” also have a half a fresh bagel. All blood work is consistently normal. This meal keeps them full for hours. My thoughts are… Eat all the eggs you want within reason. Common sense. Use olive oil and add fresh veggies. We are in charge of our own health and choices. Limit processed foods. I eat 6-8 a week.
Additionally, as an ethical vegan I now care just as much about the health (existence) of chickens, as many are purpose bred to lay far more eggs than they would naturally, as I do my own personal health. Being vegan actually implies being consistent.
My understanding is that of the cholesterol contained in food, most of it is esterified and of the small percentage that's actually free for absorption only about half of that, on average, makes it into the blood, and assuming you have a functioning liver the body is very good at down regulating endogenous production when more free exogenous cholesterol makes its way in. There's some individual variation in regards to your ability to de-esterify, and how much you absorb; but long story short, unless you're in the top few percent of hyper-absorbers, you're probably fine having a few eggs. Where you can get into trouble is if you're pairing your eggs with saturated fat, i.e. bacon, ham, cheese, butter -- as that amplifies the absorption effect. Lots of comments here claiming eggs skyrocketed their LDL. I'd be curious what else was on their plate. Checkout Simon Hill's series with Tom Dayspring or Nutrition Made Simple. They both did really extensive and nuanced breakdowns.
During the current egg shortage, often the only eggs available in my local Sainsbury's have been Old Cotswold Legbars, which are bluish and have a picture of the rather unusual chicken that lays them on the box. On one such day in the egg aisle, I saw a man standing motionless looking at them. 'Well,' I said, putting a box in my basket, 'This is all there is.' 'But I haven't tried these,' said the main, as if it was a terrible worry. 'They're fine,' I said, 'normal eggs.' He opened a box and pointed, 'They're blue.' 'It's perfectly alright,' I said, it's a good egg.' He pointed at the bird on the box. 'It's not a chicken,' he said. I left him to it.
3 Questions: I am a healthy male in late twenties, am i ok to have 3 cooked eggs a day (omelette)? I lift weight. Is it the same nutrition value whether you drink your eggs raw/raw form in smoothie and when you cook them? Are UK organic eggs from supermarkets better than non-organic eggs (health wise)? Thank You
Reliable studies show that dietary cholesterol absolutely does have significant impact on blood cholesterol. All sorts of tricks get played by the Egg Board funded studies such as testing blood cholesterol first thing in the morning once the body has metabolised it. Also replacing other cholesterol high foods with eggs and claiming that the eggs made no difference!
The 2 search engines I use come up with the same studies, similar order, in a search for "studies dietary cholesterol eggs". There are still open questions, much research ongoing. "1 egg a day is safe" is fair advice at present knowledge. (I'm not a researcher but a subject in a long-term study so am interested.)
I know that this comment is very late but I was just offered and watched this video. I have a question that I am hoping you'll get and still answer. My understanding is that cooking causes chemical changes to the food and cooking can, in some cases, improve the effective nutritional value of the food so my question is "what about eggs?" Does it matter how you cook the egg - soft boiled, hard boiled, poached, fried, baked, or, even, raw? After being introduced to Zoe through your Covid tracking, I have continued to watch, enjoy and learned a lot from your numerous nutritional videos. Thank you for sharing your expertise.
I eat an egg mid morning, fried gently in either coconut or olive oil with turmeric and black pepper, on a slice of sourdough. I never feel hungry till mid afternoon. So glad you confirmed the benefits 😀👍🏼 We are very fortunate to have a small farm that produce excellent hen and duck eggs just on our doorstep. They don't have the label but they are organic and free range. 🙏
Pasture raised, free range is a scam. The gov says free range is a corporate massive type chicken house with a doggy door for chickens to find and walk out .. pasture raised means they are standing on grass outside for over 6 hrs..
Don't over heat oils, even the best. We are putting it through a heating process that is comparable to bad oils. Frying at anything over 225(?give or take temp for tallow or avocado is going to oxydize that oil ) What is clogging our arteries is not fat but the oxydized plates that occur and ca stick thep the very smooth walls of an artery where fats alone can't stick. That's what is killing us, the processed oils you know not to consume but are buying iol that you heat (process ) just like soy oil to cottonseed oils that you know is bad, an you avoid but we all still finish the processing of quality Oil by heating it to high on all these great oils that are expensive too. Your good oil will be as bad as the pre-processed oils. Of course it's not deodorized or colored or washed in chemicals but that results in other reactions in the body and mind. The fat scare in our arteries is actually the oxydized oil that will lead to blocking them and killing us early in life.. These people are dumbing the theory down and are doing a fine job educating the masses.. But look how food processing started with k-rations by Ansel keys. We went in the wrong direction with feeding the masses so I'm glad to see that you are chicken owners and growing some veg an herbs ..
@@solomonsalsberg5961 I threw out all my seed oils, and now have nothing but olive oil and avocado oil in my cupboard. If I fry an egg, it's on the lowest possible heat with a bit of butter. When the butter's melted, slide the egg in and leave it. It takes about five minutes but it's so much more digestible than fast-fried eggs.
@@lesleyvivien2876 cover it, it cooks faster.. I've heard ( hospital cooking job) that the brown on the egg after overcooking is harder to digest too. I haven't noticed any digestion of egg issues but I can see on a microbial level how it could be an issue..
@@solomonsalsberg5961 Faster and probably more evenly. I cover them in larger pans, but I've recently bought a really titchy one (about 4"), and haven't yet worked out how to cover it. I'm sure there is a way, even if it's only a little plate. I noticed an intolerance reaction to egg whites that were over-cooked, like a 15-minute hard-boiled egg, or cooked too fast. Have you seen Nigella Lawson drop an egg into smoking olive oil, so the white bubbles up, and the egg emerges with a fringe of a hundred oil-filled holes? I now slow-fry eggs and boil eggs in barely-simmering water. No problems. Happy.
I have high cholesterol though my BP is low, BMI low, don't smoke, cut down on sweets, drink moderately, very slim, and my diet pretty average. But recently because of my cholesterol level I was told by a health worker to not eat eggs or just eat the white part of it. What tends to happen is I don't buy them often but when I do, I fear them as a result of all the decades-old indoctrination about how bad eggs are, so they are usually left untouched in the cupboard! But I would love to eat them because I do like eggs but the info about them is so conflicting I don't know what to think anymore.
This is so me too! I am very slim but have high LDL. Mostly plant based with the odd egg thrown in. Mine sit in a box for weeks as I too have fear of them.
"@Skylark_Jones: Myth: Eggs are a GOOD cholesterol. "But the cholesterol in eggs doesn't seem to raise cholesterol levels the way some other foods, such as those high in trans fats and saturated fats, do." MAYO CLINIC "Eggs: Are they good or bad for my cholesterol? - Mayo Clinic"" Eat real food created by nature, eat organic. Don't eat processed food Don't worry about the rest.
I appreciate listening to your content. Curious though, what specific studies are you referencing when you say that recent studies have debunked concern about eggs. I would like to know where you are getting the data and who funded it.
If you buy commercial eggs here in the US yolks are sickly pale yellow. They don't taste very good. However eggs seem to hurt my joints anway so I avoid them.
Are eggs from hens fed flax seeds high in omega 3 fats and lower in cholesterol? I love eggs and find they prevent hunger cravings really well, but I have high ldl, also high hdl- not requiring statins according to my Doctor, but I am told to be careful.
Arteries are so smooth that almost nothing sticks or clogs them. What is clogging Arteries is oxydized fats, when heated to high they oxidize an create plates that that stick and clog them. Main stream doctors are not allowed to tell you the truth about the new studies or they will loose their license. Look up Ansel keys and the k-ration and his 9 country study and the research up to Dr mark Hyman functional medicine and Andrew weil intergraded medicine and see the bigger picture. Insurance companies Big Agra The alphabet agencies that were not elected to office but put their and are influenced by lobbyists and more .. We are being scammed ...
Interesting article from University of California at San Francisco Oscher Center for Integrative Health website. "Eggs:-Although eggs are lumped into an overall healthier dietary pattern in some prospective studies (chicken, eggs, legumes, nuts), there are other studies suggesting concern around egg consumption and increased cancer risk. For prostate cancer in particular, there are several studies which found an increased risk. According to a prospective study published in Cancer Prevention Research, healthy men who consumed 2.5 or more eggs per week had an 81% increased risk of lethal prostate cancer compared with men who consumed less than 0.5 eggs per week (28). The authors hypothesized that this was due to a high level of cholesterol and choline in the eggs, which are both highly concentrated in prostate cancer cells. In 2012, the authors looked specifically at choline content and found that men in the highest quintile of choline intake (471 mg/day) had a 70% increased risk of lethal prostate cancer (38). Although choline is found in all animal foods it is more highly concentrated in eggs at 250 mg per egg." Check out the article - maybe time to update this video..
Thanks Zoe for another interesting video! I watch so many nutrition-related videos these days including yours that I am starting to know some of the answers! ;) unrelated to eggs, can I request a video with a psychologist or similar in relation to getting other family members on board with dietary changes and behaviour. I think this is a real issue eg when one person is using the predict app and another/others are not! My husband says I'm obsessed with zoe etc! I would say he needs to know what I now know!
A health scare 50 years ago. Well, how many times have we been told recently to follow the science? And how often do the scientists turn out to be wrong because of their blinkered studies? When I was a teenager in the 1970's, I still remember the trumpeted news story in the UK that said eating bacon and drinking coffee for breakfast causes cancer! 12 months later it was quietly retracted! I eat 2 eggs in an omelette every morning with some fresh tomatoes.
Yes, there have been many myths. What about full cream milk - now they are saying it can reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure and it does *not* raise cholesterol in most people - but we still drink skimmed milk!. This is all due to the press and pseudo-scientists getting hold of scientific papers and not fully understanding them. Another case is that we should all drink x litres of water each day - the original paper meant 'H2O' in liquids, but the 'media' mistook this to mean pure water and then the retail industry jumped on the band wagon and started selling bottled water and like sheep, everyone fell for it (though it is good in that they now don't drink junk soda/juice so much)! Another myth is that spinach is very rich in iron - no - it isn't - it was a misprint of the decimal point in a table in a scientific paper which didn't even mention spinach in the text!
I consume about 12 eggs a day. I prefer the yolk as orange as possible, even though lighter yellower yolked eggs contain the same amount of protein, the the micronutrients will not be on the same par.
I am pre-diabetic with high cholesterol and I can eat up to 21 free range eggs a week. Only 1 a sitting normally high fat low carbohydrate breakfast like Bacon with fried egg and avocado and other 2 meals might have a boiled egg with garden salad and dressing normally balsamic vinegar my salads Contain raw vegetables like grated raw beetroot and carrots nuts and seeds tomatoes cucumber and a boiled egg. With a protein rich side. Like chicken, fish or beef. I have seen big reduction in blood glucose but no rise in cholesterol generally feel good from dinner I now eat early then fast 18hrs before breakfast the eggs and nuts certainly seem to help me not have hunger issues in morning I still only have the 1 cholesterol tablet at night and blood levels remain normal but more to point my sugar levels with out medicine back to normal range.
Eggs are cheap because of factory farming & the way we have keep these animals, even free range means 9 per sq mt, the same as 16 people in a small flat. Also your data is wrong that egg compsumtion has not gone down, its been going up since 2006, in 2021 13.5 billion eggs where consumed, 11.2 billion produced in the uk, therefore 42 million laying hens laying 200 to 300 eggs each, in awful conditions, totally unnatural. Most chickens are fed with soya most of which comes in from rainforests.
Egg consumption PER PERSON has gone down as the number of people has gone up even more. Soy comes from american farms not from Amazon. You can always find real backyard chicken's eggs from small farms if you want to. Those eggs are rich in omega3 oils and choline. My grandma's chicken live free and in the grass (ca.20 of them) eating worms,insects,grass and being occasionaly given extra corn,grains and crushed eggshells. No artificial feed,pesticides or herbïcides in a village around. And they taste and look amazing.
Sadly no mention of the link between eggs and prorate cancer as noted in the book How not to Die by Michael Greger. Eggs have been linked to hugely increasing prostate cancer risk. It’s a shame in some ways that ZOE has got so large because many of the questions/concerns here will never get answered. Mine included.
About 85% of the cholesterol in the circulation is manufactured by the body in the liver. It isn’t coming directly from the cholesterol that you eat, according to Dr. Nissen.
Thank you for posting. This is great news. I have tried to cut down on eggs but according to you there seems to be no problem having an egg now and then if you otherwise have a mainly healthy diet (we eat vegetarian most of the time).
"Scrambled, poached or boiled, eggs are a popular breakfast food the world over. Yet the health benefits of the humble egg might not be all they're cracked up to be as new research from the University of South Australia shows that excess egg consumption can increase your risk of diabetes. Conducted in partnership with the China Medical University, and Qatar University, the longitudinal study (1991 to 2009) is the first to assess egg consumption in a large sample of Chinese adults. It found that people who regularly consumed one or more eggs per day (equivalent to 50 grams) increased their risk of diabetes by 60 per cent." Science Daily - November 15, 2020
from what I understand one of the main issues with increasing health conditions is overeating of protein. Short term it is good but long term it causes serious problems, and not on the list of Blue Zones diets that tend to be almost animal products free and whole foods plant based oriented. Also something that I have learnt from my own experience - ANY sort of chemicals applied to foods make them toxic for our microbiome and another aspect that is super important - the food should be as fresh as possible, best taken from the tree and eaten immediately.
@Betty Amber this is what I thought too but it is not the longevity approach. Protein is built from amino acids that are present in high amounts in fruits, veggies and greens. I have quit 99% of animal products and do not want to go back to being ill and weak despite that the plants diet has its challenges, it is definitely better for any human.
plant based is a good approach if you have decent insulin sensitivity, you make sure to get lots of all required nutrients, and you cook foods enough to remove antinutrients. but eating a little bit from animals will make getting enough nutrition a lot more straightforward and things like eggs have relatively low environmental impact.
@@oleksandrdanylov6076 Your position makes no sense when you claim that plant diet is better for any human. It's clearly not scientific or logical. Take a deep dive into gluten, lectins, seed oils, sugar, insulin, and you might see how your point of view does not correspond to reality.
Love eggs ...I was taught that dietary cholesterol had very little impact on blood cholesterol in my first year of undergraduate medicine which was back in 1998...shame this message has still not made it through in to the general consciousness enough to save the eggs reputation!
Yes, my young adult kids were asking me if it's okay to eat more than one egg a day. I understand that there is a standard ratio based on s person's weight? Please clarify if possible. Thank you.
The tips of the hat near the end that briefly acknowledged the animal cruelty to chickens should go down in the books as the quintessential example of lip service. Well done!! Bravo!! Encore!!
As a small farmer who previously sold eggs for years, I have stopped selling them because of the pressure from government health bodies over Avian Flu. Small farmers are targets for these authorities, and these health authorities are ruthless when it comes to how they operate. When you care for your chickens like we do, it just isn't worth the risk. What I advocate is for every household who eat a lot of eggs to get some backyard hens. Regarding a chicken's carbon footprint - they create a net positive if you consider that you can feed 2-3 hens with just what goes into your compost in a week, that is trucked outside the city and dumped. It is also the best way of KNOWING that what is in your eggs. The industrial egg industry is very unscrupulous when it comes to feed, and yes, that even includes "free range" chickens. If you can't visit the chickens on the farm, there is a chance you are being fed just marketing speak. So get yourself some backyard hens for the best eggs, and take your food security into your own hands.
I have thought about raising chickens for food, but I could not bring myself to slaughter an animal, and yes I do think about it when buying it in the store, but at least I did not do it myself
Thanks. Good insight. In Guyana, we can still buy non-industrialized reared chicken.
Bless you for your thoughts!
Sad that so many farmers have had to give up poultry farming, and that so many birds have died. I am a big fan of good eggs - they are a great breakfast for sleep because they contain tryptophan, which helps us to create serotonin. and melatonin, which help us to relax and sleep.
@@maxineadderley5378 An egg laying chicken can provide much more over the course of it's lifetime than one for meat. For protein alone, a single hen can give you 5000 grams of protein over a lifetime vs. 125g for the carcass. You can also benefit from manure and grow some veg in your garden.
@@maxineadderley5378Paying someone to kill an animal for you is no better than killing an animal yourself. You sound like a good person with good morals. Unfortunely, your actions don't align to your morals
i come from the middle east and we'd never heard anything like that growing up. we were always told eggs are good for us and will make us strong. fear mongering around food in the us and uk is terrifying, especially considering they produce most of the worlds research in english. would love to see more interviews from people from other cultures.
I have been eating 6 days a day for the past 3 years, mostly weekdays. So that's 30 eggs a week. Free range. But then prices of eggs in Malaysia is relatively cheap compared to western countries. My lipid profile is good, I'm in better health than in my 20s, I'm almost 50 now. Body fat % around 12%. Very low visceral fat.
Eggs are the best.
I have my own chickens and I can really recommend having chickens in your own backyard. Its not a lot of work and its lovely to know where your egg comes from and be a little self-sufficient. Since having my own chickens, a lot of older people told me that it used to be really normal that everyone used the little bit of land they got to have their own chickens and eggs, so I think it would be wondeful if that found a comeback. Better for the chickens and better eggs for everyone who loves to eat them!
I think that is great idea.
I have a few too. The ethics get a bit complicated when you think “where have the roosters gone?” but it very easy to give a few backyard birds an excellent quality of life.
Home grown eggs, fed with whatever is around the house + kitchen waste...omg, nothing better, can spot the difference straight away with supermarket eggs, particularly the jumbos and megas that are very floury.
I live on a mountain at the edge of a forest and the woods and skies are full of things that eat chickens, so I can't have them. I am envious.
I’ve just bought my eggs, direct from the farm, I’ve seen the lovely, friendly chickens, they seem happy and very well cared for. Gorgeous eggs, newly laid today. I always test using the water test. They never float, always lie sideways. Cheaper than supermarket eggs. £2.40 per dozen. I’m very happy. 😊🥚
This is getting far too complicated, i thought it was carrots that made us happy, not eggs.
Would you be equally as "very happy", if you got a dozen carrots for £2.40?
Wow, in Canada market eggs are under $4 , farm it's $6 .
I try and find local eggs that are not corn fed, just free to grub around. Apparantly if hens don't feed on their natural foods the good nutrition in eggs is depleted. Its more difficult with the present avian flu as even free range hens are not free to roam and my local farm has to feed them corn. I can't keep hens unfortunately as I have no garden. I am on keto and eat 3-4 eggs a day. I have just had my yearly blood work done and I am fine on everything. This was a great podcast, very balanced.
Happy to see this video as I sat down to a plate of shakshuka with a side of beans instead of toast. I had two since I don't eat eggs every day. Eggs are lovely to have on hand
Loved this! I've been eating eggs on regular basis for years. They are also excellent for brain health as they contain an important nutrient called choline Go for organic if you can, as they contain much more nutrients which is down to the natural diet of the chicken. They are relatively cheap and a powerhouse of nutrients. 🐔 😚
choline degrades with cooking
@Betty Amber Thank you for such a good and accurate answer! 😚
I love eggs and could eat them every day. At present I'm buying my eggs from a local farm, fresh from the hen!
I have switched to Organic eggs, but not for nutritional reasons. Organic means smaller flock sizes and better welfare for the hens. The UK government at some point in the last 12 years lowered the standards required for eggs to be free range, a step I was appalled by.
@Oleksandr Danylov then have some raw. I do in iced coffee. Makes it nice and creamy
I am in Tenerife, and definitely no shortage here. Lovely eggs as well.
Thank you for the clarity on the issue. I eat 3 eggs a day and I weight train and cycle. And the only source of cholesterol in my diet is via the eggs and the issue cholesterol always plagues my mind about eggs and if I'm doing the right thing eating them. I am aware of the density of nutrients in the egg but them always weighing the the negative effects of the cholesterol.
In the late 80s I did a fitness trainer program. The bloke who taught the nutrition part happened to be a competitive power lifter and work in a lab. He tried increasing his egg intake and track his biomarker on how well he would digest it. Which he could do conveniently in the lab he worked at. He told us that in a hard training phase he could consume up to 12 eggs a day without showing any negative impact on his markers.
I found this very confusing: -"Dietary cholesterol does not affect blood cholesterol."
-"Don't have more than one egg, or maybe two per day. More than this is too much dietary cholesterol, which affects blood cholesterol."
I'm paraphrasing something she said several times.
dietary cholesterol does affect blood cholesterol.
Has anyone been offered an egg white omelette 😂 wtf is this?
You guys are talking about chicken eggs. Currently with bird flu we are all realising that confining thousands of birds isn't really the ethical answer in the 21st century. Have a tofu scramble instead. Tofu never started a pandemic.
@@adamswift1747haha you are consumed by your own fallacy. You should give the scientific channels a wide berth. 😂😂😂
@@neilbennett9281 consuming a fallacy is not something I would recommend, or indeed know how to do.
The difference is between short and long term/chronic impacts. In normal individuals, eating foods with low-to-moderate amounts of sugar, cholesterol, or salt don't substantially increase the risk of diabetes, high cholesterol, or high blood pressure, respectively. They can, however, cause temporary spikes in readings of blood sugar, cholesterol, and blood pressure, respectively, which is normal, and in healthy individuals those readings return to baseline after digestion.
People who have existing health conditions or risks do need to be more careful, as Dr. Berry said, because you can spike already elevated levels, and in some people dietary sources do carry higher risk.
It's easy to get this stuff confused - it's why we've had decades of seemingly conflicting advice on what not to eat - but the high-quality evidence is more or less saying the same thing. It's just not always easy to communicate this in brief ways.
I eat a lot of eggs a day as a protein source for weight training.
👍
I looked at science that show that if your LDL cholesterol is as low as it should be, eating cholesterol has a rather strong influence on your LDL. So the effect on your LDL is small only if LDL is already too high . Edit: That was not completely correct, it is not about the LDL levels per se, it is about how much cholesterol you have previously eaten. So if you regularly eat a lot of cholesterol the extra effect on LDL is rather small, but it can rise dramatically if you have a habit of eating very little or no cholesterol.
Exactly. She smoothly avoids that inconvenient detail - like a seasoned used car dealer selling you a lemon. Sad to think how many people watching will be taken in.
@@JustAskTheAxis What a foolish, cynical and baseless accusation.
@@EdwardLindon okay, let me qualify my comment.
one could argue that her omission is not an intentional deception but merely negligence and incompetence. Either way, she is culpable for misleading viewers who are unaware that when she refers to “normal” cholesterol levels, she doesn’t mean normal as in “okay” or “sufficient” - rather , she means the highly elevated cholesterol levels that are “normal” to people consuming a standard American diet (SAD). It’s an important difference,
This is why I'd like to see this Dr debate someone from the plant based side, I'm not convinced eggs is good for long term health.
@@zodd67 Yes, why eat eggs when you can eat something nutritious with fiber and phytonutrients instead? I would say everything is a matter of comparison.
I've moved over to 2 eggs per day and reduced the amount of carbs right down. I'm enjoying 2 fried or poached eggs on half an avocado. (with salad, tomatoes and kimchee/sauerkraut.) . I think it's helping with my joints aches.
There still seems to be a lot of fear mongering here. There is no evidence that eggs are bad for us, so why the artificial limit of one-a-day? It's the about the cheapest quality protein, even now, so whatever you replace that second or third egg with will either be not as good, or much more expensive.
If this advice would have someone who enjoys an omelette for breakfast, only having it 2 or 3 times a week, and eating toast or a bowl of cereal the other mornings - has it improved their health, or actually made it worse, with elevated blood glucose most mornings.
I would add that food-based cholesterol does affect your blood cholesterol, it just varies by individual. Years ago, I had a very rich dinner before an annual check-up the next day, and my bad cholesterol was up almost 50 points. Being mindful back to my normal diet since then, and my blood cholesterol came back down to its normal range in subsequent years. Nothing else I can recall was different.
So it’s pretty safe not calling eggs a superfood
I wonder how long your blood chloresterol was raised after a very rich dinner. Does the body adjust over a few days?
So your body’s mechanisms went to work, sending out the taxis to collect stuff to take back to the liver, and worked pretty hard, hence the change in numbers. Well done, your body works and cholesterol scaremongering is a load of twaddle.
Love your presentations! I'm a dietitian and diabetes educator in Australia and must admit that I plagiarise parts of some of your talks with my patients. Thankyou Zoe for making it so easy for me to stay up to date. Please come to Australia soon!!
why don't you just acknowledge the source like a human being?
Yeah like a normal human being
Hope you aren't still advocating the Standard Australian Diet (SAD) with lots of carbs. Dietitians are to blame for a lot of misinformation, given that the guidelines are out of date, and your organisation is funded by Big Food.
The ethical issues still remain a significant deterrent to the consumption of eggs .
@Betty Amber probably you be a savage
@Betty Amber more than a billion male chicks are disposed of each year because they have no value. Watch the disposal on you tube and then say you have no ethical issues.
As a professional bodybuilder now 60 yrs of age… i eat 4-6 whole eggs , mostly 4 eggs a day every day. I know the nutrition value of the egg. Besides, i also know that cholesterol is not a problem based on what the top doctors have said about having high LDL. I am in great shape and health. On zero medications. I work out 4- days a week and do cardio up the mountains 2-3 a week. By diet is getting better as i am slowly studying all about farmed salmon and processed food which now i stay away from.If you exercise even walk everyday and watch your by eating healthy carbs you can eat pretty much till your full. People don’t want to exercise.
I eat 5 eggs a day . No processed sugar, no bread etc .
I am shocked by the lack of rigorous science on Zoe. The recent egg studies are largely sponsored by the egg industry, Further more the high saturated fat causes heart diseae.
Not to mention the cruelty of the egg industry. Why would you eat eggs when there are so many other plant based foods that are not only much healthier but much kinder to animals.
Eggs have very little saturated fat and any of the studies I have seen are not sponsored by the egg industry. Which studies are you talking about?
@@nickarrizza one large egg has 1.5g of saturated fat. I suggest you go broader in your research than Dr Barnard. If you don't want to eat eggs for humane reasons I completely understand. I was just letting you know the bit about saturated fat is not true. Have a great day 😊
I’m American. I eat three eggs in the morning, five days a week and sometimes on the weekend. I work in a greenhouse and am generally active (though I do not exercise). I have no cholesterol or cardiovascular issues and actually have trouble putting on weight. I was vegan for seven years, and eggs are what my diet was lacking. Hard to believe that folks view them negatively. But doctors are full of shit. They parrot what they’re told by industry group, and rarely if ever take a critical look at what they’re fed by government or industry sources. They’re only use is emergency services.
What does being "american'' have to do with eating eggs, if you don't mind me asking.
@@dianalivingconsciously9013 I LOL'd, but maybe it's cos of the situation there with for-profit doctors. OR it's like when people feel the need to preface every statement with something like, "As a mom..." 😀
@@dianalivingconsciously9013 Listen to the comparison presented around 11:00 and you will understand.
As a 21st century American, you are entitled to your own truth, and everything else said by anyone is a scam or just stupid. Well done you.
@@Kwippy Steady on 😂
Great to hear. I've had amazing results eating more fat, fewer carbs and intermittent fasting. I enjoy eggs but currently only have two a week. I shall increase the amount I eat now.
Really don't.
why
@@richardjackson5380
You could probably have 2 a day without any problem really. ( there are medical conditions where this isn't true though, but those are .... medical conditions )
www.clevelandheartlab.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Taking-a-Closer-Look-at-TMAO-CHL-D077.pdf
@@richardjackson5380 There is nothing wrong with eating one or two eggs a day. It's one of the healthiest proteins you can eat. Just make sure they're pasture raised or have your own chickens. Watch the video "What'll Happen to You If You Start Eating 3 Eggs a Day?"
Why if there is no relation between dietary cholesterol in eggs and blood cholesterol does Sarah suggest we limit eggs to one a day?
I think her point was a reasonable amount of dietary cholesterol is acceptable for healthy people but high amounts could be dangerous for people with lipid issues
She said "dietary cholesterol has little effect on blood cholesterol". That is possibly disingenuous as it can be both true and false. Blood serum cholesterol can be expressed as a sigmoidal curve, whereby if you're in the upper region, additional dietary cholesterol doesn't push you higher. If you're in the lower ranges, dietary cholesterol absolutely pushes up blood serum cholesterol. Basically at a certain point, blood serum cholesterol 'tops out' and won't necessarily go higher. Only half the story is presented in this video. Her statement is accurate only where higher blood serum cholesterol is preexisting. The full picture is more nuanced.
This 100%. Thanks for saying this... i don't get why people always pick half the info they like and fits their story, and leave out the rest. I guess that is what they call cherry picking...
@@barbettecaravaggio7675 people like to hear good news about their bad habits
If you already have high cholesterol, you’re just adding to a problem. At medium levels you may be pushing yourself up to the problem range, if you have low cholesterol feel free to eat them.
I was told that egg yolk contains the cholesterol and that I’m free to use the whites.
He didn’t establish her credentials either.
Exactly!! Thank you 💚 plus there are some very important reasons for us a to be transitioning away from animal products in took plant-based diet besides health.. there's land use greenhouse gas and animals rights... I won't get into it all in detail here but animal agriculture has got to go... Plant strong ✌️💚
@@trotskyite1 exactly.. and there's definitely a huge amount of cognitive distance at play here with most of our current world population on subjects black animal. For the same reason a lot of our are in denial about what the oil and gas industry is doing.. it's very similar but more people are connected to animal agriculture.. so that's why more people are experiencing cognitive dissonance about it then oil and gas.. it is so obvious when you look at statistics of surveys or even populations of people that vote one way or the other in different states or provinces that people are hugely bias to whatever it is that they're comfortable with and don't want to change he'll deny the science on it and skew the data and favour some of the outliers or industry-funded studies
Years ago, I tested a bit high for cholesterol. I was told to adjust my diet and on no account to eat eggs.
Then we had the 'Egwina Curry' scandal, when the Secretary of State for Agriculture etc, announced that most British eggs contained salmonella.
No wonder my generation then developed the mindset that eggs are bad for you.
If it's good for you, they'll tell you to not eat it. Do the opposite.
Your cholesterol was high but not because you ate eggs.
@@TTR83yep. Bingo. It was probably some amount of processed food or salty bacon or sausage.
@@indranidasgupta8982 I've been in Britain. Most garbage bins are drowned in empty packages of breakfast cereal. They like sugary stuff. Eggs probably are not the culprit.
@@TTR83 I've heard that too... I have family in the UK and one cousin and his family exclusively does keto, but the other is more varied. But I know in general, the UK population is big into carbs... refined and processed carbs.
Great information Sarah & Jonathan! I only eat eggs when I go out to a cafe for breakfast and can't find a vegan option (i.e. a burrito of mainly rice, beans, vegetables, and salsa). I'm not a strict vegan at this time (I eat a few small tins of fish a couple times a week, so I suppose I'm a pescatarian), but this information helps alleviate a lot of my concerns about eggs. I will probably just keep it at 3 eggs per week due to my environmental & welfare concerns for chickens, but I won't be overly concerned about eating a few more eggs at times.
Thanks!
www.clevelandheartlab.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Taking-a-Closer-Look-at-TMAO-CHL-D077.pdf
I recently got done reading Lisa mosconi's Brain Food book, and she recommends about 3 eggs per week for brain function. Same with fish. Veg and whole grains in abundance, some fermented food for microbial activity.
Eggs are the best food ever. They are my No 1 convenience food - quick to cook, highly versatile and very nutritious.
My egg consumption has never wavered. I don't necessarily have eggs every day, but that is only because I have a variety of foods available.
The number I have at any one time can vary depending what I'm eating as my meal/ A 5 egg omelette,3 hard boiled eggs with mayonaise, or 2 with a salad. 1 or 2 fried eggs with bacon and /or sausages. How many do I eat a week? That depends on what I fancy to eat and when - anything from zero upwards
I hope you comment on the negative impact that some may experience from eggs based on their gut microbiome. Dr Greger reported the research regarding TMAO
What are wggs? Are they bad for people?
@80s Music thank you. "Wggs" was a typo for "eggs". Please excuse me and thank you for your comment bringing it to my attention
Eggs have a lot of choline, which gets transformed to trimethylamine in certain microbiome, then gets oxidized to TMAO in the liver, and that substance circulates around the body as a cardio-toxin until it is eliminated. Cue the next egg to be consumed, and TMAO reappears again.
What about egg consumption and cancer risk and/or egg production and the avian flu threat?
Each day I have 4 eggs for breakfast and 2 in the evening before bed. That includes 2 yolks and 6 whites. I'm 65 and have no health issues beyond low thyroid.
This is so informative. I remember the shortage back in February and seeing all these elderly folks standing around the area where you picked up the eggs in the store. It was then that I realized that many of our elderly population in the USA eat eggs more so then meat because of the cost. When I became a vegetarian I started looking at where my food came from. Range free eggs are harder to get in my area and extremely expensive when they are there, so I opt for cage free eggs. Thanks for the video.
Very good to discuss this topic although I have a few questions. Why isn't it better explained what scientific findings at the time proclaimed eggs were bad? How is it possible that the scientific findings of then and now are so at odds with each other? 2. Why is no attention paid to the saturated fatty acids in eggs or are they no longer harmful too? I think these are two aspects that are so obvious and yet they are hardly discussed.
Before recently I was eating four eggs almost every day and was surprised to find my cholesterol is normal. My problem isn't eggs, meat or other protein, it's carbs. My doctor encouraged me to eat more lean meat (such as burger without bread and so forth). Of course moderation is still important though.
I know I'm not the only one who's had enough of the back and forth between the different groups who have their own agendas. I've been living with diabetes since 1998 and haven't spent a night in the hospital yet! I have to think about diet and weight management and health more than the people who are still in good health and probably still taking their health for granted. "They" scared people off of eggs because of saturated fat and cholesterol because of the belief that those things lead to heart disease. They told people to eat oatmeal and drink orange juice. Then millions of people became overweight type 2 diabetics from all the sugars/starches/grains etc. Now many people are slimming down on low carb high fat diets but even the cardiologists don't agree if that is foolish long term even if it is working in the short term for slimming down and getting better control of the high blood sugar problem. Then you have the vegans who are almost more concerned about the animals than they are their own long term health. Then you have the worthless government who lets the big companies "mislead" people about what things like "cage free" actually mean. The companies take advantage of the people who do care about the animals and the environment but still do believe that homosapiens need to eat meat/eggs/dairy etc to be well nourished. I'm a reader and it's not even all completely clear to me what is the "right" thing to do and when it is or isn't worthwhile to agree to pay more for "pasture raised" etc. So what in the bleep can you expect from people who aren't inclined to put much thought into these matters?
I found it easiest just to give all plants and stop listening to anyone about nutrition.
I agree it is a nightmare to get straight true information. Every UA-camr is probably biased, selling their book. diet plans, supplements, or just channel subscribers. Half truths from most, just the bits that support their ideas. Worse we can not trust governmental advice either as they have been wrong and/or do not correct advice when things change from better research. Plus all the supposedly 'good' stuff is always the expensive stuff.
@@nicholaspostlethwaite9554 Are you in the USA like me or elsewhere? During the quarantine I started watching more tv than I normally would just to pass the time. I watched some of the guru book sellers on PBS and their books are in the library. They are all claiming that they keep up on all the latest studies and are trying to summarize things for "average" people and address some of the myths etc. But they are all giving different diet advice. The one doctor is for the vegan diet and the other one is not. Some of those guys are on the QUACKWATCH list. People tend to think they can trust what is on PBS and what is in the library. My mom was watching Dr Amen the Psychiatrist. If you Google him some mental health professionals have said he is a huckster! He's made millions. Everyone has an agenda it seems.
@@jackschitt6235 No I am in the UK. Far less if anything on tv here it is on line like here, that all these vested interest 'hucksters' seem to gather. It amazes me anyone buys these books many have. Overall it is a failure of central governments to study and make such videos or even books themselves. Advised by the best national scientists, and presented by competent presenters, accepting most scientists are not good at presentation, it's not their 'job' skill. This information stream should also debunk misinformation regularly. It is like Government and science organisations, have not noticed the internet and how people look for information! Even medics, doctors, GPs in UK, seem largely out of touch and just ticking boxes for an easy life.
You may not care about cramping hens in smelly overcrowded prisons 24/7 to produce their menstrual product for you to enjoy, but this article is about another substance you should be aware of for health: www.clevelandheartlab.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Taking-a-Closer-Look-at-TMAO-CHL-D077.pdf
Eggs are the true superfood, especially paired with butter, another superfood!
Don't believe the garbage about fat and cholesterol, two things that keep us alive.
So eggs have no negative effects and yet she still claims we should limit consumption to 1 or 2 eggs per day. Lol. I prefer 10- 12 per day
It was all part of the grand plan to sell cerial. I love eggs, i eat the whole egg, a lot. Eggs. Fast food and good for you.
Please discuss the concern about eggs encouraging cancer, specifically colon and prostate cancer.
As a kid in the 1960’s I remember the “Go to work on an egg” TV advert fronted by Tony Hancock, I even had a badge with the slogan on. It was not in the 1950’s.
I have Typ 2, keep fit, BMI 23, and perfect blood pressure. One Dr says do not eat eggs and the other says eat eggs, when I found I have Typ 2, I started to eat up to 24 eggs per week, then found my Cholesterol had gone up to 5. I have since changed to having Two Chicks Egg whites in omelets 5 x per week and on weekends have 4 x full eggs, my cholesterol has reduced. So now the Dr who wants me to eat full eggs is really pushing Statins, I just do not get it, I walk hard 3 to 4 miles per night, and do 5-mile walks on weekends, doing loads of press ups, sit ups etc, the information is confusing, but I have decided no matter how hard they push, I do not want to take the statins. The last bit is nothing to do with eggs, but just to show the confusion :)
As soon as you get your D2 under control, it's like they say "oh damn, now what can we push on him/her". I've refused Statins in writing and they STILL try to push them on me.
I agree generally. It is not that it is confusing, it is that the supposed experts whose jobs are in the health area and ought to know and understand these issues a lot easier than me, not only say different things they appear not to know. Perhaps the truth is none of it is true, its all guess work, but careers depend on them sounding confident of having the right answer to the patients. My GP wants me on statins too. Way higher than you at 8 last time. Just not interested or able to say why it is high though, never even ask what I eat. Just box ticking to push statins. BMI 21. HbA1c last time 38 non diabetic range. Diabetic, original Hospital consultant said tp1, (late onset) am using insulin, noticed GP notes say tp2. These experts just guess it seems. So what chance of a UA-camr having anything right?
Eat real food created by nature, eat organic. Don't worry about the rest.
I eat 14 eggs a week for the last 5 years and no problems whatsoever.
Focussing on 'complete protein' is not necessary since if you eat different proteins within a day - some studies show over 2 days - the body uses and combines them anyway.
It’s still better to focus on complete proteins, because incomplete proteins have inferior bioavailability.
I never believed in the cholesterol porkies , I usually demolish around 18 eggs a week and thrive.
Demolishing them s such a waste- better to eat them in moderation. Eighteen a week sounds to eat. One is one too many to demolish. Protect the egg. Eggs are pure.
I friggin love eggs, I eat them almost daily
I eat 7 eggs every morning. I have low blood pressure and a 30 inch waist and I’m a 5ft10 man
Tl;dw: yolks are vital (fats, most nutrients, etc), white is basically protein (albumin)
I can say, since I changed my diet to low-carb, eating daily 2-3 eggs, my LDL has significant increased. 🤔
😮
It’s interesting that this happens with some experts saying it is not a problem (in the absence of systemic inflammation) and others saying it is a significant warning sign.
I would really love to see you bring on Dr. Greger and have a debate. Because he's reviewing all of the research and you are reviewing the research and both are coming up with polar opposite conclusions and recommendations.
THIS
Fantastic. Could you also tackle the myths around fiber and saturated fats? (Like you said, counter the "old research")
@genomedia44: In the youtube search bar type in "sugar industry fat" and a ton of videos will result explaining the story of the sugar industry going after the saturated fat industry and winning. We're all still suffering from this problem.
Thanks Zoe for another useful video on nutrition. I used to believe that eggs were “bad” because of previous guidance and this was compounded by the results of a food intolerance test that showed me to have high intolerance to apricots and egg whites. I stopped eating both though not always possible to completely avoid egg whites. Now I know that egg whites are a “complete” protein I’m wondering if I should ignore my intolerance result…
The ‘food intolerance test’ may be unreliable. If however you notice adverse effects yourself from eating egg whites then there are plenty of other sources of protein
So really it's disturbing that the information given by professionals is so contradictory that the rest of us who are not educated in this field a completely lost
One egg a day... oops I‘ve been eating 4-5 a day for years lol
Should be fine. I have 4 at least a day and my cholesterol is GREAT!
Thank you. Cruelty is also involved in free range egg production (notably, the killing of male chicks and fictitious claims of freedom: refs PETA 2023 and Veganuary 2016)
Like any animal food consumption, this is a truth we have to accept if we believe that doing so is desirable and/or necessary for optimal human health. It us a truth nonetheless.
Thanks for the videos. I love your content
The latest independent studies shows that the HIGH in saturated fats and cholesterol in egg yolks DO raise your risk of heart disease. Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death.
Can you give a source for the study ?
Please support this statement. I don't think it is true.
@@rebanelson607 I get my information on the latest nutrition studies from the non profit UA-cam channel NutritionFacts by Dr. Greger. You would will find the links to the clinical studies there.
We need to ignore the recent studies made by the egg industry to sell eggs.
One reason for a decline in egg consumption not mentioned in the video was the salmonella scare, in the UK at least. Edwin Currie, as a health minister, scared the bejesus out of the population by saying the bacterium was present in just about all chickens.
Hi eggs haven’t declined in the uk consumed 13.5 billion eggs last year & its been going up since 2006
Edwina Curry. Resigned December 16th 1988. British egg industry decimated. My dad picked me up from university for Xmas on that day- I remember it very well.
@@eightiesmusic1984 Edwina, of course!
Edwina Curry did not say 'almost all chickens had salmonella'. She said ALMOST all egg PRODUCTION was CONTAMINATED.. It was the media who spread the MYTH that she said all chickens and eggs had salmonella!
Salmonella is normal flora in chickens. That's why you don't eat raw eggs. Cooking the egg kills the bacteria.
What about the deleterious effects on arterial function/ endothelium?
I keep my own chickens and generally eat 4+ eggs a day and have done for well over a decade.
With the exception of cholesterol every single health marker is excellent even by the conventional medical standards and reference ranges.
Cholesterol is only one risk factor of heart disease, and should be taken into account along with all the others, but because it was easily measurable it has become the default for many doctors.
After both of my last two annual medicals my G.P. has highlighted concern over my slightly high total cholesterol and LDL.
However, both my last lipid panels were essentially the same:
Fasting status:Fasting
Cholesterol:6.1 mmol/L ( < 5.0 ) H
Triglyceride:0.8 mmol/L ( < 2.0 )
HDL Cholesterol:1.54 mmol/L ( > 1.00 )
LDL cholesterol:4.2 mmol/L ( < 3.4 ) H
Chol/HDL Ratio:4.0 ( < 4.5 )
Comment:For most patients non-fasting lipids are acceptable for CVD risk assessment, as Chol/HDL ratio is not affected.
For established CVD risk (including diabetes) NZGG optimal levels are Cholesterol < 4.0, LDL < 2.0 and Chol/HDL ratio < 4.0.
From my reading of published research papers on cholesterol and the formulae used to calculate LDL-C, the low triglycerides throw out most of the formulae, which adjusted for reduces the LDL-C slightly but still above the high end of the range.
However, it is my understanding that the fact the TG is low and HDL-C is high indicates my high LDL-C is not a concern as this pattern is consistent with the LDL-C being of the large buoyant type rather than the dangerous small dense LDL kind.
Very interesting. I would really like to know what research she refers to here and who paid for that research.
I wish chrome had a plug-in that could look at a video title "x things you needs to know" and immediately extract those 4 things from the transcripts.
My husband (60) and 2 adult sons in their mid twenties each have very healthy diets, drink a lot of water, do yoga, lift weights at the gym and may go for a long run once a week. As well as active lifestyles. For 4 + years they each eat 3-4 eggs every morning. Filled with fresh chopped veggies (broccoli/asparagus/garlic/onions/peppers and either turkey sausage or ham about 1/4 each serving or less then top with freshly grated cheese. The “kids” also have a half a fresh bagel. All blood work is consistently normal. This meal keeps them full for hours.
My thoughts are… Eat all the eggs you want within reason. Common sense. Use olive oil and add fresh veggies.
We are in charge of our own health and choices.
Limit processed foods.
I eat 6-8 a week.
Additionally, as an ethical vegan I now care just as much about the health (existence) of chickens, as many are purpose bred to lay far more eggs than they would naturally, as I do my own personal health. Being vegan actually implies being consistent.
My understanding is that of the cholesterol contained in food, most of it is esterified and of the small percentage that's actually free for absorption only about half of that, on average, makes it into the blood, and assuming you have a functioning liver the body is very good at down regulating endogenous production when more free exogenous cholesterol makes its way in. There's some individual variation in regards to your ability to de-esterify, and how much you absorb; but long story short, unless you're in the top few percent of hyper-absorbers, you're probably fine having a few eggs. Where you can get into trouble is if you're pairing your eggs with saturated fat, i.e. bacon, ham, cheese, butter -- as that amplifies the absorption effect. Lots of comments here claiming eggs skyrocketed their LDL. I'd be curious what else was on their plate. Checkout Simon Hill's series with Tom Dayspring or Nutrition Made Simple. They both did really extensive and nuanced breakdowns.
During the current egg shortage, often the only eggs available in my local Sainsbury's have been Old Cotswold Legbars, which are bluish and have a picture of the rather unusual chicken that lays them on the box. On one such day in the egg aisle, I saw a man standing motionless looking at them. 'Well,' I said, putting a box in my basket, 'This is all there is.' 'But I haven't tried these,' said the main, as if it was a terrible worry. 'They're fine,' I said, 'normal eggs.' He opened a box and pointed, 'They're blue.' 'It's perfectly alright,' I said, it's a good egg.' He pointed at the bird on the box. 'It's not a chicken,' he said. I left him to it.
Egg shortage? wow, never imagined that could happen.
3 Questions:
I am a healthy male in late twenties, am i ok to have 3 cooked eggs a day (omelette)? I lift weight.
Is it the same nutrition value whether you drink your eggs raw/raw form in smoothie and when you cook them?
Are UK organic eggs from supermarkets better than non-organic eggs (health wise)?
Thank You
Reliable studies show that dietary cholesterol absolutely does have significant impact on blood cholesterol. All sorts of tricks get played by the Egg Board funded studies such as testing blood cholesterol first thing in the morning once the body has metabolised it. Also replacing other cholesterol high foods with eggs and claiming that the eggs made no difference!
Where is the references for the studies mentioned?
Agree, Sarah says "the latest research says" but no reference to it anywhere!
The 2 search engines I use come up with the same studies, similar order, in a search for "studies dietary cholesterol eggs". There are still open questions, much research ongoing. "1 egg a day is safe" is fair advice at present knowledge. (I'm not a researcher but a subject in a long-term study so am interested.)
Great information as always. Sensible stuff
Really.....
I really eny your shorts. Thank you for clearing up a lot of misinformation
I know that this comment is very late but I was just offered and watched this video. I have a question that I am hoping you'll get and still answer. My understanding is that cooking causes chemical changes to the food and cooking can, in some cases, improve the effective nutritional value of the food so my question is "what about eggs?" Does it matter how you cook the egg - soft boiled, hard boiled, poached, fried, baked, or, even, raw?
After being introduced to Zoe through your Covid tracking, I have continued to watch, enjoy and learned a lot from your numerous nutritional videos. Thank you for sharing your expertise.
@michaelpowell4202: Type this into the youtube search bar and you'll find your answer: "does cooking an egg make it more nutritious"
I eat an egg mid morning, fried gently in either coconut or olive oil with turmeric and black pepper, on a slice of sourdough. I never feel hungry till mid afternoon. So glad you confirmed the benefits 😀👍🏼
We are very fortunate to have a small farm that produce excellent hen and duck eggs just on our doorstep. They don't have the label but they are organic and free range. 🙏
Pasture raised, free range is a scam. The gov says free range is a corporate massive type chicken house with a doggy door for chickens to find and walk out .. pasture raised means they are standing on grass outside for over 6 hrs..
Don't over heat oils, even the best. We are putting it through a heating process that is comparable to bad oils. Frying at anything over 225(?give or take temp for tallow or avocado is going to oxydize that oil )
What is clogging our arteries is not fat but the oxydized plates that occur and ca stick thep the very smooth walls of an artery where fats alone can't stick. That's what is killing us, the processed oils you know not to consume but are buying iol that you heat (process ) just like soy oil to cottonseed oils that you know is bad, an you avoid but we all still finish the processing of quality Oil by heating it to high on all these great oils that are expensive too. Your good oil will be as bad as the pre-processed oils. Of course it's not deodorized or colored or washed in chemicals but that results in other reactions in the body and mind. The fat scare in our arteries is actually the oxydized oil that will lead to blocking them and killing us early in life..
These people are dumbing the theory down and are doing a fine job educating the masses..
But look how food processing started with k-rations by Ansel keys. We went in the wrong direction with feeding the masses so I'm glad to see that you are chicken owners and growing some veg an herbs ..
@@solomonsalsberg5961 I threw out all my seed oils, and now have nothing but olive oil and avocado oil in my cupboard.
If I fry an egg, it's on the lowest possible heat with a bit of butter. When the butter's melted, slide the egg in and leave it. It takes about five minutes but it's so much more digestible than fast-fried eggs.
@@lesleyvivien2876 cover it, it cooks faster..
I've heard ( hospital cooking job) that the brown on the egg after overcooking is harder to digest too. I haven't noticed any digestion of egg issues but I can see on a microbial level how it could be an issue..
@@solomonsalsberg5961 Faster and probably more evenly. I cover them in larger pans, but I've recently bought a really titchy one (about 4"), and haven't yet worked out how to cover it. I'm sure there is a way, even if it's only a little plate.
I noticed an intolerance reaction to egg whites that were over-cooked, like a 15-minute hard-boiled egg, or cooked too fast. Have you seen Nigella Lawson drop an egg into smoking olive oil, so the white bubbles up, and the egg emerges with a fringe of a hundred oil-filled holes?
I now slow-fry eggs and boil eggs in barely-simmering water. No problems. Happy.
I have high cholesterol though my BP is low, BMI low, don't smoke, cut down on sweets, drink moderately, very slim, and my diet pretty average. But recently because of my cholesterol level I was told by a health worker to not eat eggs or just eat the white part of it. What tends to happen is I don't buy them often but when I do, I fear them as a result of all the decades-old indoctrination about how bad eggs are, so they are usually left untouched in the cupboard! But I would love to eat them because I do like eggs but the info about them is so conflicting I don't know what to think anymore.
Cholesterol through diet has very little to do with your blood cholesterol levels. If you like to eat eggs, eat them.
This is so me too! I am very slim but have high LDL. Mostly plant based with the odd egg thrown in. Mine sit in a box for weeks as I too have fear of them.
Do you exercise? Moderate exercise has been shown to lower cholesterol
"@Skylark_Jones: Myth: Eggs are a GOOD cholesterol. "But the cholesterol in eggs doesn't seem to raise cholesterol levels the way some other foods, such as those high in trans fats and saturated fats, do." MAYO CLINIC "Eggs: Are they good or bad for my cholesterol? - Mayo Clinic"" Eat real food created by nature, eat organic. Don't eat processed food Don't worry about the rest.
I appreciate listening to your content. Curious though, what specific studies are you referencing when you say that recent studies have debunked concern about eggs. I would like to know where you are getting the data and who funded it.
She said in a previous video that egg fried in olive oil is better than poached. I was hoping for some detail on this. Sadly none!
@brendanmccann5695 Google this: "egg in olive oil is better than poached"
Yes, a nut will grow into a tree and an egg will grow into a chicken, but chickens cluck and trees bark.
You're on 🔥with the puns
You're barking up the wrong tree. 🙂
If you buy commercial eggs here in the US yolks are sickly pale yellow. They don't taste very good. However eggs seem to hurt my joints anway so I avoid them.
My husband eats FOUR eggs a DAY and his cholesterol just last month is 187. The body balances out any excess.
rooky numbers ^^ I'm eating 6-8
that's pretty high cholesterol
@@Poogoo701 Around 120-200 is actually in the normal range.
Recent research has been funded by industry and designed specifically to confuse people. It seems to be working.
Are eggs from hens fed flax seeds high in omega 3 fats and lower in cholesterol? I love eggs and find they prevent hunger cravings really well, but I have high ldl, also high hdl- not requiring statins according to my Doctor, but I am told to be careful.
Arteries are so smooth that almost nothing sticks or clogs them. What is clogging Arteries is oxydized fats, when heated to high they oxidize an create plates that that stick and clog them. Main stream doctors are not allowed to tell you the truth about the new studies or they will loose their license.
Look up Ansel keys and the k-ration and his 9 country study and the research up to Dr mark Hyman functional medicine and Andrew weil intergraded medicine and see the bigger picture.
Insurance companies
Big Agra
The alphabet agencies that were not elected to office but put their and are influenced by lobbyists and more ..
We are being scammed ...
If you have high HDL and low triglycerides, no need to worry about LDL
Interesting article from University of California at San Francisco Oscher Center for Integrative Health website. "Eggs:-Although eggs are lumped into an overall healthier dietary pattern in some prospective studies (chicken, eggs, legumes, nuts), there are other studies suggesting concern around egg consumption and increased cancer risk. For prostate cancer in particular, there are several studies which found an increased risk. According to a prospective study published in Cancer Prevention Research, healthy men who consumed 2.5 or more eggs per week had an 81% increased risk of lethal prostate cancer compared with men who consumed less than 0.5 eggs per week (28). The authors hypothesized that this was due to a high level of cholesterol and choline in the eggs, which are both highly concentrated in prostate cancer cells. In 2012, the authors looked specifically at choline content and found that men in the highest quintile of choline intake (471 mg/day) had a 70% increased risk of lethal prostate cancer (38). Although choline is found in all animal foods it is more highly concentrated in eggs at 250 mg per egg." Check out the article - maybe time to update this video..
Dietary cholesterol doesn't really affect blood cholesterol..she doesn't seem convinced though .. 1 or less eggs a day ?
I've eaten 30 eggs a week for decades.
I'm in perfect health, all blood work is normal including cholesterol.
Thanks Zoe for another interesting video! I watch so many nutrition-related videos these days including yours that I am starting to know some of the answers! ;) unrelated to eggs, can I request a video with a psychologist or similar in relation to getting other family members on board with dietary changes and behaviour. I think this is a real issue eg when one person is using the predict app and another/others are not! My husband says I'm obsessed with zoe etc! I would say he needs to know what I now know!
I can safely like this video. She did a marvelous job with her explanations...
A health scare 50 years ago. Well, how many times have we been told recently to follow the science? And how often do the scientists turn out to be wrong because of their blinkered studies? When I was a teenager in the 1970's, I still remember the trumpeted news story in the UK that said eating bacon and drinking coffee for breakfast causes cancer! 12 months later it was quietly retracted! I eat 2 eggs in an omelette every morning with some fresh tomatoes.
Yes, there have been many myths. What about full cream milk - now they are saying it can reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure and it does *not* raise cholesterol in most people - but we still drink skimmed milk!. This is all due to the press and pseudo-scientists getting hold of scientific papers and not fully understanding them. Another case is that we should all drink x litres of water each day - the original paper meant 'H2O' in liquids, but the 'media' mistook this to mean pure water and then the retail industry jumped on the band wagon and started selling bottled water and like sheep, everyone fell for it (though it is good in that they now don't drink junk soda/juice so much)! Another myth is that spinach is very rich in iron - no - it isn't - it was a misprint of the decimal point in a table in a scientific paper which didn't even mention spinach in the text!
I consume about 12 eggs a day. I prefer the yolk as orange as possible, even though lighter yellower yolked eggs contain the same amount of protein, the the micronutrients will not be on the same par.
I am pre-diabetic with high cholesterol and I can eat up to 21 free range eggs a week. Only 1 a sitting normally high fat low carbohydrate breakfast like Bacon with fried egg and avocado and other 2 meals might have a boiled egg with garden salad and dressing normally balsamic vinegar my salads Contain raw vegetables like grated raw beetroot and carrots nuts and seeds tomatoes cucumber and a boiled egg. With a protein rich side. Like chicken, fish or beef. I have seen big reduction in blood glucose but no rise in cholesterol generally feel good from dinner I now eat early then fast 18hrs before breakfast the eggs and nuts certainly seem to help me not have hunger issues in morning I still only have the 1 cholesterol tablet at night and blood levels remain normal but more to point my sugar levels with out medicine back to normal range.
“Big fried breakfast bad for you” ! Just leave the toast out and eat the butter. Fat is good. Feel full and just eat two meals a day, or even OMD
Exactly these "experts" at zoe are mad, obsessed with fibre, demonizing meat and fat.
Edwina Currie MP (remember her?) did alot of damage to the UK industry by stating that most UK egg farmers had salmonella
Thank You Dr. Sarah you are a wonderful speaker very coherent with exceptional knowledge
Eggs are cheap because of factory farming & the way we have keep these animals, even free range means 9 per sq mt, the same as 16 people in a small flat. Also your data is wrong that egg compsumtion has not gone down, its been going up since 2006, in 2021 13.5 billion eggs where consumed, 11.2 billion produced in the uk, therefore 42 million laying hens laying 200 to 300 eggs each, in awful conditions, totally unnatural. Most chickens are fed with soya most of which comes in from rainforests.
Egg consumption PER PERSON has gone down as the number of people has gone up even more. Soy comes from american farms not from Amazon. You can always find real backyard chicken's eggs from small farms if you want to. Those eggs are rich in omega3 oils and choline. My grandma's chicken live free and in the grass (ca.20 of them) eating worms,insects,grass and being occasionaly given extra corn,grains and crushed eggshells. No artificial feed,pesticides or herbïcides in a village around. And they taste and look amazing.
Sadly no mention of the link between eggs and prorate cancer as noted in the book How not to Die by Michael Greger. Eggs have been linked to hugely increasing prostate cancer risk. It’s a shame in some ways that ZOE has got so large because many of the questions/concerns here will never get answered. Mine included.
About 85% of the cholesterol in the circulation is manufactured by the body in the liver. It isn’t coming directly from the cholesterol that you eat, according to Dr. Nissen.
Thank you for posting. This is great news. I have tried to cut down on eggs but according to you there seems to be no problem having an egg now and then if you otherwise have a mainly healthy diet (we eat vegetarian most of the time).
I lowered my cholesterol to below at total of 150 by cutting out all animal products and that includes eggs.
@@pattylow1total cholesterol doesn’t mean anything. Look deeper at other numbers…
@keithdennis1462: There is no reason to cut down on eggs, it's one of the healthiest proteins you can eat.
"Scrambled, poached or boiled, eggs are a popular breakfast food the world over. Yet the health benefits of the humble egg might not be all they're cracked up to be as new research from the University of South Australia shows that excess egg consumption can increase your risk of diabetes.
Conducted in partnership with the China Medical University, and Qatar University, the longitudinal study (1991 to 2009) is the first to assess egg consumption in a large sample of Chinese adults.
It found that people who regularly consumed one or more eggs per day (equivalent to 50 grams) increased their risk of diabetes by 60 per cent."
Science Daily - November 15, 2020
from what I understand one of the main issues with increasing health conditions is overeating of protein. Short term it is good but long term it causes serious problems, and not on the list of Blue Zones diets that tend to be almost animal products free and whole foods plant based oriented. Also something that I have learnt from my own experience - ANY sort of chemicals applied to foods make them toxic for our microbiome and another aspect that is super important - the food should be as fresh as possible, best taken from the tree and eaten immediately.
@Betty Amber this is what I thought too but it is not the longevity approach. Protein is built from amino acids that are present in high amounts in fruits, veggies and greens. I have quit 99% of animal products and do not want to go back to being ill and weak despite that the plants diet has its challenges, it is definitely better for any human.
@@oleksandrdanylov6076 eating plant based made me extremely sick after a few years. Be careful
plant based is a good approach if you have decent insulin sensitivity, you make sure to get lots of all required nutrients, and you cook foods enough to remove antinutrients. but eating a little bit from animals will make getting enough nutrition a lot more straightforward and things like eggs have relatively low environmental impact.
@@oleksandrdanylov6076 Your position makes no sense when you claim that plant diet is better for any human. It's clearly not scientific or logical. Take a deep dive into gluten, lectins, seed oils, sugar, insulin, and you might see how your point of view does not correspond to reality.
Love eggs ...I was taught that dietary cholesterol had very little impact on blood cholesterol in my first year of undergraduate medicine which was back in 1998...shame this message has still not made it through in to the general consciousness enough to save the eggs reputation!
Yes, my young adult kids were asking me if it's okay to eat more than one egg a day. I understand that there is a standard ratio based on s person's weight? Please clarify if possible. Thank you.
The tips of the hat near the end that briefly acknowledged the animal cruelty to chickens should go down in the books as the quintessential example of lip service. Well done!! Bravo!! Encore!!