Susan
04-21-2011, 02:08 AM
I live in a region where it is quite difficult to get good, fresh seafood. You can get good regional fresh-water fish, but not the kinds that always get recommended for the "good" fats you should consume. Also, I'm not so happy with buying and eating a lot of mass-produced, deep-freezed fish that I don't even know where it comes from - but it comes from afar for sure. And it just doesn't taste the way it should.
So I was asking myself - where did people get their essential fats over here before they shipped deepfreezed salmon around the world?
It seems that there was a lot of flax cultivation in our region until the second half of the last century. There are still some small regional oil-mills that produce organic flaxseed-oil.
This oil contains a large amount of unsaturated fatty acids and a unusual high ratio of Omega 3 to Omega 6 fatty acids. It should never be heated, so its best used in salad or yoghurt or other cold dishes. It also should be stored cold, you can even put it in the freezer, and used quickly (it gets pressed fresh every week).
From what I read you need about 1 tablespoon of flaxseed-oil to get enough Omega 3 per day.
I bought a small bottle of our regional oil-mill yesterday, it tastes just like flaxseed, and I put some in my salad and some in my oatmeal.
I though I would share this. Of course many of you may live in a region where you can really get good fresh seafood, but if you don't you may want to know alternatives. Regarding essential fats I read a lot about how you should try to eat salmon or other fatty sea-fish as often as possible. This may be a good advice if you live near the sea. But I never read about the possibility to use flaxseed-oil - and living nowhere near the sea this seems to be the better way to go.
There has been a lot of "hype" regarding salmon in the last years, to the point where they sell deepfreezed salmon in the supermarkets under the name "Vitality Omega-3 Wild-Salmon-filet". But thinking of the way this salmon gets fished and is then shipped thousands of miles just because everybody thinks they need it to prevent heart disease etc., because we usually don't know any alternatives, it's sad - and strange. The need to eat salmon twice a week is so omnipresent in the media (and gets even repeated by doctors) that most people don't question it - I didn't question it for a long time. The fact that it's not possible to provide such large amounts of salmon and other seafood to the whole western world without doing major damage to the environment is often overlooked.
So I was asking myself - where did people get their essential fats over here before they shipped deepfreezed salmon around the world?
It seems that there was a lot of flax cultivation in our region until the second half of the last century. There are still some small regional oil-mills that produce organic flaxseed-oil.
This oil contains a large amount of unsaturated fatty acids and a unusual high ratio of Omega 3 to Omega 6 fatty acids. It should never be heated, so its best used in salad or yoghurt or other cold dishes. It also should be stored cold, you can even put it in the freezer, and used quickly (it gets pressed fresh every week).
From what I read you need about 1 tablespoon of flaxseed-oil to get enough Omega 3 per day.
I bought a small bottle of our regional oil-mill yesterday, it tastes just like flaxseed, and I put some in my salad and some in my oatmeal.
I though I would share this. Of course many of you may live in a region where you can really get good fresh seafood, but if you don't you may want to know alternatives. Regarding essential fats I read a lot about how you should try to eat salmon or other fatty sea-fish as often as possible. This may be a good advice if you live near the sea. But I never read about the possibility to use flaxseed-oil - and living nowhere near the sea this seems to be the better way to go.
There has been a lot of "hype" regarding salmon in the last years, to the point where they sell deepfreezed salmon in the supermarkets under the name "Vitality Omega-3 Wild-Salmon-filet". But thinking of the way this salmon gets fished and is then shipped thousands of miles just because everybody thinks they need it to prevent heart disease etc., because we usually don't know any alternatives, it's sad - and strange. The need to eat salmon twice a week is so omnipresent in the media (and gets even repeated by doctors) that most people don't question it - I didn't question it for a long time. The fact that it's not possible to provide such large amounts of salmon and other seafood to the whole western world without doing major damage to the environment is often overlooked.