Fast Food Using Less Trans Fats

七月 16, 2010
Trans fats have been showing up less often in fast-food restaurant meals.

Research from the University of Minnesota's Nutrition Coordinating Center has shows major chains have significantly reduced their use of oils that contain trans fat in French fries and other food during the past 10 years. Saturate fat use in these restaurants has either been reduced or stayed steady during the same time.

In a press release from the University of Minnesota, lead researcher Lisa Harnack said the center maintains a food and nutrient database that goes back to the 1970s.  "We're able to go back in time and compare the present with the past,” she said. “And we did that in looking at fast-food restaurants,"Harnack said. "We found fast-food restaurants are making big improvements in the frying oils, with trans fat going down in most of the restaurants – as well as saturated fat, either going down or staying the same."
Like to receive news like this by email? Join and Subscribe!
Join Our Telegram Channel for regular updates!
Sponsored Content
J&J green paper, a Miami-Dade company, announces the implementation of its game-changing sustainable packaging initiative Janus® in partnership with arcos dorados, the largest MCDonald's independent franchisee in the world
六月 27, 2024

J&J Green Paper implements its sustainable packaging initiative Janus® with largest independent McDonalds franchisee in the world

J&J Green Paper has announced that its revolutionary JANUS® barrier technology is being used by Arcos Dorados Holdings, Inc., the world’s largest independent McDonald’s franchisee and a local packaging supplier in Argentina.
España: se celebró la sexta edición del Papatour en Canarias
六月 25, 2024

España: se celebró la sexta edición del Papatour en Canarias

La sexta edición del evento que reúne a productores y asociados al sector celebró con éxito su sexta edición.
The UN says 40% of the world's land is already unable to sustain crops
六月 22, 2024

UN food chief on soil degradation: Poorest areas have zero harvests left

Droughts and flooding have become so common in some of the poorest places on Earth that the land can no longer sustain crops, the director of the World Food Programme’s global office has said.
Sponsored Content