The Enoch family was one of 46 families to
participate in a study entitled "Individual Variation in Response to a
Margarine or Butter-Based Diet: A Study in Families" published in the Journal
of the American Medical Association and conducted by Dr. Margo Denke at the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center at
The study, which was designed to evaluate
responsiveness to diet within families, confirmed that almost everyone can
benefit from a heart-healthy diet. This was done by testing the simple
substitution of one food - margarine instead of butter.
By substituting soft margarine for butter,
the entire Enoch family -- including the three Enoch children -- lowered their
total and LDL (bad) cholesterol significantly. Mrs. Enoch's total cholesterol dropped
35 pts. (15%) when she went from butter to margarine and her LDL dropped
28 pts. (19%). Mr. Enoch's and all the
children showed dramatic decreases as well.
Across the entire study group of 46 families
(92 adults and 134 children), the margarine-based diet reduced bad cholesterol
by an average of 11 percent in adults and 9 percent in children.
Cholesterol Reductions after the
Switch from Butter to Margarine:
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Family Member |
Total Cholesterol |
LDL (Bad) Cholesterol |
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Mrs. Enoch |
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Mr. Enoch |
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Hayley |
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Christopher |
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Margarine was created by a Frenchman from
1873
An American patent was granted to Mège-Mouriez who intended to expand his French margarine
factory and production to the
1878
Unilever began manufacturing margarine in
1871-73
The U. S. Dairy Company in
1877
State laws requiring identification of
margarine were passed in
1881
Improvements to Mège-Mouriez’s
formulation were made; U.S. Dairy created a subsidiary, the Commercial
Manufacturing Company, to produce several million pounds annually of this new
product.
1885
When a court voided a ban on margarine in
1886
More than 30 manufacturing facilities were
reported to be engaged in the production of margarine. Among them were Armour
and Company of Chicago and Lever Brothers of New York. Seventeen states
required the product to be specifically identified as margarine. Various state
laws to control margarine were passed in a number of states, but were not
enforced. Later that year,
1902
32 states and 80% of the
1902
Amendments to the Federal Margarine Act
raised the tax on colored margarine five-fold, but decreased
licensing fees for white margarine. But demand for colored
margarine remained so strong, that bootleg colored
margarine flourished.
1904
Margarine production suffered and consumption
dropped from 120 million pounds in 1902 to 48 million.
1910
Intense pressure by
competitors to keep prices low and new product innovations, as well as dairy
price increases, returned production levels of margarine back to 130 million
pounds. The Federal tax remained
despite many efforts to repeal it, but consumption grew gradually in spite of
it.
1920
With
1930
The Margarine Act was again amended to place
the Federal tax on naturally-colored (darkened with
the use of palm oil) as well as artificially-colored
margarine. During the Depression dairy interests again prevailed upon the
states to enact legislation equalizing butter and margarine prices. Consumers
reacted and consumption of margarine dropped to an annual per capita level of
1.6 pounds.
1932
Besides Federal taxes and licenses, 27 states
prohibited the manufacture or sale of colored
margarine, 24 imposed some kind of consumer tax and 26 required licenses or
otherwise restricted margarine sales. The Army, Navy and other Federal agencies
were barred from using margarine for other than cooking purposes.
1941
Through production innovations, advertising
and improved packaging, margarine consumption regained lost ground. A Federal
standard was established recognizing margarine as a spread of its own kind.
With raised awareness of margarine’s health benefits from a 1941 National
Nutrition Conference, consumers began to take notice of restrictions on
margarine that were keeping the product from them and artificially inflating
the price.
1943
State taxes on margarine were repealed in
1947
Residual war shortages of butter sent it to a
dollar a pound and Margarine Act repeal legislation was offered from many
politicians.
1950
Some of the more popular brands prior up
until now were Cloverbloom, Mayflower, Mazola, Nucoa, Blue Plate, Mrs. Filbert’s, Parkay,
Imperial, Good Luck, Nu-Maid, Farmbelle,
Shedd’s Safflower, Churngold,
Blue Bonnet, Fleischmann’s, Sunnyland and Table Maid.
1950
Margarine taxes and restrictions became the
talk of the country. Finally, following a significant effort by the National
Association of Margarine Manufacturers, President Truman signed the Margarine
Act of 1950 on March 23 of that year.
1951
The Federal margarine tax system came to an
end. Pre-colored margarine was enjoyed by a consumer
also pleased with lower prices. Consumption almost doubled in the next twenty
years. State color bans, taxes, licenses and other
restrictions began to fall.
1960s
The first tub margarine and vegetable oil
spreads were introduced to the American public
1967
1996
A bill introduced by Rep. Ed Whitfield would
signal an end to the last piece of legislation that adversely affects the sale
of margarine. Currently, federal law prohibits the retail sale of margarine in
packages larger than one pound, as well as detailed requirements regarding the
size and types of labeling of margarine and a color requirement. This new legislation would remove these
restrictions from the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA). Rep.
Whitfield’s bill, the Margarine Equity Act, is part of HR 3200, the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) reform package and addresses dated requirements that
are not applicable to the marketplace.
1998
125th anniversary of the