April 2, 2025
In this powerful GoldCare Grand Rounds class, journalist and author Nina Teicholz breaks down the flawed science behind the war on saturated fat, exposes the rise of seed oils, and reveals how decades of dietary guidelines were shaped by politics—not evidence. If you've ever questioned mainstream nutrition advice, this eye-opening talk is a must-watch.
Read about this class:
For decades, Americans have been told to fear saturated fat. From the top of the food pyramid to the back of the cereal box, the message was clear: fat clogs arteries and leads to heart attacks. But Nina Teicholz, science journalist and author of The Big Fat Surprise, says that narrative was never rooted in solid science—and the truth has been buried for far too long.
In a powerful class hosted by GoldCare’s Zelenko Memorial Series, Teicholz unraveled the long history of how fat was wrongly blamed for heart disease—and why we’re still paying the price.
The Real Origin of the “Fat is Bad” Myth
It all began in the 1950s, when President Eisenhower had a heart attack and the nation panicked. A charismatic scientist named Ancel Keys stepped into the spotlight, claiming saturated fat raised cholesterol, leading to heart disease. His “diet-heart hypothesis” caught fire.
Despite flimsy evidence, the American Heart Association adopted Keys' theory in 1961. That single move launched a global war against fat. Butter was replaced with margarine. Lard gave way to vegetable oil. And Americans were told to trade their steaks for low-fat everything.
But behind the scenes, the science didn’t hold up.
Massive Trials. No Results. Buried for Decades.
In response to rising heart disease rates, governments around the world launched clinical trials involving over 67,000 participants. The goal? Test Keys’ theory.
The result? Saturated fat showed no link to heart attacks, strokes, or death.
One major trial—the Minnesota Coronary Experiment—found no difference in outcomes between people eating high-fat diets and those following low-fat, plant-oil-heavy plans. But instead of changing course, the researchers sat on their results for 17 years. Their reason? The findings were “disappointing.”
The Rise of Seed Oils—and a Hidden Danger
As saturated fat was pushed out, seed oils flooded in. Soybean, corn, cottonseed, and canola oil became kitchen staples. Sold as heart-healthy, they were anything but.
Teicholz revealed that these oils, especially when heated, break down into unstable compounds—oxidized byproducts that drive inflammation and may be linked to cancer, liver damage, and even neurodegenerative disease. Industry insiders know this. The general public doesn’t.
Worse still? These same oils are now the backbone of ultra-processed foods, from fast food fries to so-called “health” snacks.
The Politics of the Plate
Why hasn’t the truth come out? Teicholz laid it bare: the process behind U.S. dietary guidelines is deeply political. It's run by the USDA, an agency tasked with promoting agricultural products—not protecting public health.
Add in committee members with ties to food corporations or ideological biases (including vegan religious groups), and it’s no surprise the guidelines continue to demonize saturated fat while ignoring seed oil risks.
A Better Way Forward
What does the science actually support? Teicholz pointed to ketogenic and low-carb diets as powerful tools for improving metabolic health. These diets consistently outperform standard low-fat plans for weight loss, blood sugar control, and even mental health—without requiring people to fear red meat or butter.
She also encouraged using stable fats like tallow, butter, ghee, and coconut oil for cooking, and olive or avocado oil for cold use. Her message was simple: returning to traditional fats can make a real difference.
Why GoldCare Hosted This Class
As Dr. Simone Gold emphasized during the session, this conversation is exactly what GoldCare was built for: confronting entrenched ideas with real evidence and empowering people to think differently about their health.
This class was not just a history lesson—it was a call to action. One that challenges decades of nutrition dogma and asks: What if the food we were told to fear was actually the key to better health?
The science is in. The guidelines need to catch up.