margarine

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

margarine

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

margarine manufactured substitute for butter. It consists of a blend of vegetable oils or meat fats (or a combination of both) mixed with milk and salt. It was developed in the late 1860s by the French chemist Hippolyte Mège-Mouries in a contest sponsored by Napoleon III for a butter substitute. Beef fat, known as oleo oil, was chiefly used at first, but later was supplemented by pork and other animal fats and by vegetable oils such as coconut oil, olive oil, and cottonseed oil. At present, most margarines contain only vegetable oils; the margarine produced in the United States is usually made from corn, cottonseed, or soybean oil. The oils, refined, deodorized, and hydrogenated to the desired consistency, are churned or homogenized, usually with cultured skim milk, then chilled and reworked to incorporate salt and remove excess water. Margarine is similar in composition to butter, yields practically the same number of calories, and is easily digestible. It is commonly fortified with vitamin A and vitamin D. In the 1960s a new type of margarine was developed made of polyunsaturated fats (see cholesterol ). Margarine is sometimes called oleomargarine.

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margarine

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

margarine Butter-like substance made from vegetable fats blended with aqueous milk products, salt, flavouring, food colouring, emulsifier, and vitamins A and D. It is used for cooking and as a spread. It is used for cooking and as a spread.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article The spread box. (Brand-name rating).(margarines)
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 12/1/2001
Free Article Margarine meltdown. (saturated fat content)
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 11/1/1990
Free Article Fats face off: margarine vs. butter.
Magazine article from: Current Health 2, a Weekly Reader publication; 11/1/1995

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The spread box. (Brand-name rating).(margarines)
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 12/1/2001; 700+ words ; A margarine or spread earned a Best Bite if no more...sat-plus-trans. Within each category, margarines and spreads are ranked from best to worst...Numbers in italics are our estimates. Margarine or Spread (1 Tbs.) Calories Total Fat... Read more
Margarine meltdown. (saturated fat content)
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 11/1/1990; ; 700+ words ; Margarine Meltdown Margarine is in no danger of being mistaken for a healthy food. After all...sprinkling of safe additives. Since water has no calories, almost all of margarine's calories come from fat. But that's not to say all margarines are... Read more
Fats face off: margarine vs. butter.
Magazine article from: Current Health 2, a Weekly Reader publication; 11/1/1995; ; 700+ words ; First is Margarine, weighing in with 2 grams of saturated...cholesterol. At first glance, it would appear Margarine is the obvious favorite. Earning points...and about the same number of calories, Margarine must easily win. But what about those... Read more
Margarine Debate Takes On Free Trade Flavor as Unilever Fights Color Ban.
Newspaper article from: Food & Drink Weekly; 1/11/1999; 496 words ; Unilever Canada Ltd turned Quebec's margarine debate into a free trade issue as it...called Quebec's ban against yellow colored margarine an unfair restriction on trade. At issue...provincial law that regulates the color of margarine sold Unilever contends the law conflicts... Read more
Cholesterol-Lowering Margarine : Effect is Insignificant With Low-Fat Diet.
Newspaper article from: HealthFacts; 11/1/1999; ; 556 words ; The new Benecol Margarine lowers cholesterol by an average of...cholesterol after eating a similar margarine without stanol esters. The participants...cholesterol intake of 300 mg daily. The margarine's cholesterol-lowering benefit, however... Read more
Cargill creates breakthrough in margarine emulsification.(Ingredients)
Magazine article from: Food Trade Review; 9/1/2008; 367 words ; Frying in the home when using margarine is now safer for consumers with the launch...appearance of conventionally manufactured margarines. Patented by Cargill, EmulfluidTM SE...development in the emulsification process of margarine, according to Mike Jones, Cargill Texturizing... Read more
BUTTER VS. MARGARINE.(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 10/1/1999; ; 202 words ; Butter has saturated fat. Many margarines have trans fat. Which is worse for your heart? It depends on the type of margarine, say researchers at the Jean Mayer...lower in those eating semiliquid margarine (sold in squeeze bottles), nine... Read more
Better than butter? Margarine spread its wings (Brand-name rating).
Newspaper article from: Nutrition Action Healthletter; 12/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...Less Fat and Calories than Butter and Margarine. Good Source of Vitamin E. 100% Expeller-Press...extra half hour when you're shopping for margarine. And don't forget your reading glasses...Association's approval, and HDL/LDL ratios. Margarine labels may have so many more claims per... Read more
Dutch Near Decision on Unilever's Cholesterol-Lowering Margarine.
Newspaper article from: Food & Drink Weekly; 10/19/1998; 247 words ; ...month if a revolutionary cholesterol-lowering margarine is safe. The margarine, made by Anglo-Dutch consumer products group Unilever...bloodstream can lead to heart disease. To make the margarine, Unilever enriches Flora, one of its best known... Read more
Anti-Cholesterol Margarine on Hold as FDA and Processors Discuss Its Legality.
Newspaper article from: Food & Drink Weekly; 11/16/1998; 499 words ; The makers of Benecol, a new margarine promoted as a cholesterol-lowering...Johnson, that they could not sell a margarine spread as a dietary supplement...which makes them ideal for use in a margarine-type spread. Also, McNeil says Benecol... Read more

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