Reverse Skin Aging
I spent a month studying cooking in southern France. Traditional people here cook everything in copious amounts of duck fat. A Gascony staple is duck confit, a plump tender duck leg that has been cooked long and slow under a layer of duck fat. This is often served with duck foie, otherwise known as fattened duck liver.
Say what you will of this diet, but the skin of women here is extraordinarily silky smooth and young looking. Interestingly, the heart disease rate in this part of France is lower than in the rest of France and far lower than in the states. A physician here told me women in this region are the longest-lived women in the world. I did not verify this. I just know they looked good.
Your skin cell walls are made of fat. Thus the type and amount of fat you choose in your diet will reflect in your skin. Other foods can damage or protect the fat in our skin cells, accelerating or slowing (and even reversing) signs of skin aging.
Hydration is a well-known key to healthy plumped up skin cells. Adequate fluids help prevent skin cells from drying out, which makes us look older. While the inside of skin cells benefit from water, the surface (cell walls) need fat. A significant amount our cell membranes are made of saturated fat, which gives cells structure, integrity and protection from sun damage.
Duck fat is semisolid, a blend of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, although mostly saturated. Research confirms saturated and monounsaturated fats are associated with wrinkle resistance.
In a Japanese study of over 700 women, those who consumed the most saturated fat developed significantly less wrinkles. Monounsaturates also helped, but saturates were most effective. These fats correlated not only with less wrinkling but better skin elasticity.
Saturates don’t seem to hurt overall health either. Traditional French have significantly lower rates of heart disease and live longer than most other western cultures. Research confirms what traditional cultures have experienced for thousands of years. There is no correlation between saturated fats and heart disease, according to a recent 21-study analysis of saturated fats.
Skin-protecting fats are found in coconut and palm oils, butter, beef and pork. Monounsaturated fats come from olive oil, macadamia nuts or oil and duck fat. The fats to be avoided are vegetable oils, including canola, safflower, sunflower and soybean oils, especially when hydrogenated. Why? These oils are omega-6 rich and vulnerable to light, heat and age.
UV light is so damaging because it oxidizes, and thus damages, the fat in our cell walls. Omega 6 fatty acids are more vulnerable to oxidation than saturates or monounsaturates.
Dermatologists warn us to slather on sunscreen to shield us from sun, but protection from the right dietary fats is likely more effective.
Pacific islanders, despite living outdoors in a perpetually sun-drenched climate, have healthy, nearly wrinkle-free skin. A diet rich in coconut oil, palm oil and lard is part of the reason.
Studies show omega 3 fats plus fruits and vegetables are also effective in protection from UV light. Omega 3’s are found in cold-water fish, pastured eggs and beef, walnuts, chia seeds, flax seeds and leafy greens.
Antioxidant-rich fruits and vegetables along with vitamin E from nuts and seeds further protect our skin against oxidation. Vitamin-C is not only an antioxidant, but it strengthens collagen, which gives our skin strength, elasticity and resistance to wrinkles. Citrus, kiwi, berries, peppers and dark leafy greens are especially rich in vitamin C, plus other age-slowing antioxidants. Dark leafy green and yellow vegetables seem to be most protective.
Green tea contains an age-fighting chemical called ECGC (epigallocatechin gallate), which causes aging surface skin cells to regenerate much like younger cells. ECGC also quenches damage induced by UV light and slows collagen breakdown.
On the other hand, refined sugar, milk, vegetable oils and alcohol speed up skin damage and wrinkles. Check food labels for vegetable oils. You don’t just want to avoid partially hydrogenated oils, you want to skip the canola, gape seed and sunflower oils too.
Alcohol is inflammatory and dehydrating and in excess can age any cell in the body. Sugar, especially when found in baked form, leads to formation of AGE’s, advanced glycation endproducts. AGE’s can age any organ of the body, including the skin.
A diet rich in traditional fats, olive oil, fish, fruits, vegetables, green tea and low in sugars and vegetables slows aging throughout your body, with your skin one of the more visible sign.
Pour info, le lait cru est super bon pour la peau, c’est un antioxydant puissant.
I read recently that duck fat on the skin is really good for wrinkles and cellulite. I already use coconut oil but was wondering about duck fat and the effectiveness it would have on the skin.
These are all great choices for aging skin. I have not tried duck fat myself as I associate the smell with hearty food. Women in the Gascony region of France have beautiful velvety skin and attribute it to all the duck fat they consume. Consuming fats helps hydrate skin. I have found castor oil as a moisturizer is helpful with wrinkles and dryness. Frankincense essential oil is also a wrinkle treatment and smells nice in the oil.
If you look at some of the most successful people in the history of anything, you’ll find that they typically have some sort of morning routine or quirk that gets them fired up for the day — most exercise, some dip themselves into an ice bath and others rub lotion all over their skin. Indeed, it is really quite effective to getting the younger look. In contrary, this generation, just spend a lot of money to repair or restore their skin by undergoing a surgery or any medical operations, which I can’t take. I still find healthy lifestyle is the key to slowing down ageing process. Hopefully that everyone will find this post so that they’ll open their eyes.
Great article linda!
Hi linda, I have noticed for the past month my face has been super oily whereas it was always a combination skin. I have been breaking out on my forehead too. ANy tips or thoughts?
Andria, there are several things that could contribute… could be you are going overboard on fats/oils, or possibly hormones are changing. Would need to see your diet and ask you some questions.
I like this post!
I’m not sure of this for myself but walnuts are often rancid when bought and have a high amount of omega 6s. I would say they are good (ike most things) on proviso that they’re fresh…
Cheers,
Michael.
Yes, because of their rich essential fat content, many nuts are rancid when you buy them. Look for a fresh harvest of walnuts, or other nuts, then store in your freezer. Rancid nuts, just like rancid oils age your skin and organs.
Linda,
This makes me always think twice when reaching for sugary snack!
I am about to order some daily moisturizer from NYR Organic and I was wondering….would you suggest I get one with sunscreen?
Thanks!
andria
No! Most sunscreen is toxic, unless you are using something like zinc or a mineral that physically blocks sun. Wear a hat and don’t overdo!