Educational Content Disclaimer: This article provides educational information only and is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The content discusses general health topics and should not replace consultation with your licensed healthcare provider. Always consult with your doctor before making changes to your diet, supplements, or medications. Dr. JJ Gregor is a Doctor of Chiropractic licensed in Texas and practices within the scope of chiropractic care.
The American Heart Association tells you to eat whole grains, vegetable oils, and low-fat everything.
Meanwhile, heart disease remains the #1 killer in America.
Maybe the advice is wrong.
Here's the real list of heart-healthy foods—the ones that reduce inflammation, prevent oxidation, stabilize blood sugar, and support cardiovascular function.
Spoiler: butter made the list. Vegetable oil didn't.
Before we get to the list, let's define terms.
Heart disease is caused by inflammation, oxidative stress, and arterial damage. Not cholesterol. Not saturated fat.
So "heart-healthy" foods are those that:
The mainstream definition focuses on "lowering cholesterol." That's why their recommendations fail.
Cholesterol doesn't cause heart disease. So lowering it doesn't prevent heart disease.
Let's talk about what actually works.
Yes, red meat. Specifically grass-fed beef, lamb, and bison.
Grass-fed ruminants provide:
The studies linking red meat to heart disease never controlled for processed meats, seed oils, sugar, or overall diet quality. Traditional populations eating high amounts of red meat (Maasai, Inuit, Mongolian herders) had virtually no heart disease.
Grass-fed is critical. Grain-fed beef has a worse omega-6 to omega-3 ratio and lacks the beneficial nutrients from pasture.
Liver, heart, kidney, tongue. These are the most nutrient-dense foods on the planet.
Beef liver provides:
Beef heart is pure muscle—packed with CoQ10, taurine, and collagen.
Eat liver once or twice per week (4-6 ounces). If you can't stomach organ meats, desiccated organ supplements work.
Wild-caught salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring, anchovies.
These provide:
Wild-caught is essential. Farmed fish are fed corn and soy, creating a terrible omega-6 to omega-3 ratio and accumulating toxins.
Aim for 2-3 servings per week minimum.
Whole eggs. Including the yolks (especially the yolks).
Egg yolks contain:
The cholesterol in eggs doesn't raise blood cholesterol for most people. Your liver regulates cholesterol production based on dietary intake.
Eating 3-4 eggs daily is safe and beneficial for cardiovascular health.
Real butter. Full-fat. From grass-fed cows.
Grass-fed butter provides:
The recommendation to replace butter with margarine created the heart disease epidemic. Margarine is made from seed oils (oxidized, inflammatory). Butter from grass-fed cows is a traditional food eaten for millennia.
Cook with butter. Put it on vegetables. Add it to coffee. It's one of the healthiest fats you can eat.
Animal fats from healthy animals are stable, non-oxidizing fats perfect for cooking.
Tallow (beef fat) and lard (pork fat) are primarily saturated and monounsaturated fats—chemically stable at high heat.
Unlike seed oils, they don't oxidize during cooking. No free radical production. No inflammatory compounds.
Use tallow or lard for high-heat cooking. Save the drippings. Use them liberally.
Real extra virgin olive oil (not the fake stuff, which is unfortunately common).
Olive oil provides:
Use olive oil for salads, drizzling over vegetables, and low-heat cooking. Don't use it for high-heat cooking (it oxidizes above 375°F).
Buy from reputable sources. Much of the olive oil sold in the US is adulterated with cheaper seed oils.
Avocados are nutrient-dense fruits high in monounsaturated fat.
They provide:
Avocado oil has a high smoke point (500°F+), making it excellent for high-heat cooking.
Despite being 90% saturated fat, coconut oil is one of the healthiest cooking oils.
Medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) in coconut oil:
Use coconut oil for medium to high-heat cooking. It's especially good for baking.
Leafy greens, cruciferous vegetables, peppers, zucchini, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower.
These provide:
Focus on above-ground vegetables. Avoid starchy tubers if you have blood sugar issues.
The more colorful your plate, the better. Different colors indicate different antioxidant compounds.
Blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, strawberries.
Berries are lower in sugar than most fruits and packed with antioxidants:
Keep portions moderate (half cup to one cup). Too much fruit sugar can still spike blood sugar and triglycerides.
Macadamia nuts, walnuts, pecans, almonds. Avoid high omega-6 seeds (sunflower, safflower).
Macadamia nuts are the best—highest in monounsaturated fat, lowest in omega-6.
Walnuts provide plant-based omega-3 (ALA), though conversion to EPA/DHA is poor (5-10%).
Soak or roast nuts to reduce phytic acid (anti-nutrient that blocks mineral absorption).
Keep portions moderate. Nuts are easy to overeat and high in omega-6.
Turmeric, ginger, oregano, rosemary, garlic, cinnamon, cayenne.
Ounce for ounce, herbs and spices are among the most antioxidant-rich foods available.
Use them liberally. They add flavor and provide concentrated anti-inflammatory compounds.
Made from bones, connective tissue, and joints simmered for 12-24 hours.
Bone broth provides:
Drink a cup daily or use it as cooking liquid for soups and stews.
Canola, soybean, corn, vegetable, sunflower, safflower, cottonseed, grapeseed oil.
These are the #1 dietary cause of heart disease.
They're chemically unstable, oxidize easily, incorporate into cell membranes and LDL particles, and drive systemic inflammation.
Remove them completely. Read every label. They're in everything.
Sugar, high-fructose corn syrup, white flour, bread, pasta, rice, cereal.
High blood sugar glycates proteins (including LDL), damages arterial walls, drives insulin resistance, and raises triglycerides.
Remove sugar, limit carbohydrates, stabilize blood sugar.
Wheat contains gluten, which triggers inflammation and gut dysfunction in many people.
All grains spike blood sugar and provide minimal nutrition compared to animal foods and vegetables.
Remove grains completely or limit to occasional white rice if you tolerate it.
If it comes in a package with more than 5 ingredients, avoid it.
Processed foods contain seed oils, sugar, artificial additives, and inflammatory compounds.
Eat real food. Single-ingredient foods.
Partially hydrogenated oils, margarine, shortening.
Trans fats are synthetic fats created by adding hydrogen to vegetable oils to make them solid at room temperature.
They're universally recognized as harmful. Even the FDA banned them (though some are still allowed under labeling loopholes).
Avoid completely.
Here's what this actually looks like:
Breakfast: 3-4 eggs cooked in butter, side of sautéed spinach, half an avocado
Lunch: Grass-fed burger (no bun) with sautéed mushrooms and onions in tallow, side salad with olive oil dressing
Dinner: Wild-caught salmon, roasted broccoli and Brussels sprouts with butter, side of sauerkraut
Snack (if hungry): Macadamia nuts, berries, or bone broth
Notice what's missing: grains, seed oils, sugar, processed foods.
Notice what's abundant: animal protein, animal fats, colorful vegetables.
This is nutrient-dense, anti-inflammatory eating that supports cardiovascular health.
Proteins:
Fats:
Vegetables:
Fruits (limited):
Other:
For comprehensive nutrition strategies and meal planning, visit the Fuel Your Body pillar page.
Heart-healthy foods are those that reduce inflammation, prevent oxidation, stabilize blood sugar, and provide nutrients for cardiovascular function.
That means:
Not on the list:
The American Heart Association got it backwards. They recommended seed oils and whole grains while demonizing butter and red meat.
The result: an epidemic of heart disease.
Cholesterol doesn't cause heart disease. Inflammation and oxidative stress do.
Eat real food. Prioritize nutrient density. Remove inflammatory triggers.
That's how you actually support cardiovascular health.
Ready to optimize your diet for cardiovascular health? Dr. JJ Gregor provides comprehensive nutritional evaluations and personalized meal planning at his Frisco, Texas practice. Schedule a consultation to develop a customized nutrition strategy that addresses your unique health goals and supports long-term cardiovascular wellness.
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