Lard is pig fat in both its rendered and unrendered forms. Photo / Getty Images
Lard is pig fat in both its rendered and unrendered forms. Photo / Getty Images
Lard has long been maligned as the unhealthiest fat to cook with - but a dietitian has revealed that it may actually be good for you.
Lard - which is made from pig fat - contains "good" fats called monounsaturated fats that research has shown can help lower levels of"bad" cholesterol, Jo Travers of the British Dietetic Association revealed on Food Unwrapped on Channel 4 in the UK.
Despite outdated research linking unsaturated fats to heart disease, more recent studies reveal that in fact eating healthy unsaturated fats can improve heart health.
And according to the Daily Mail, it could even be better for us than butter.
She says: "Commercially produced lard that you often get in a supermarket, the fat profiles are quite different."
Matt warns that if lard has "hydrogenated" on the label, it is best avoided.
He advises sourcing high-quality lard from a farm rearing free-range pigs.
Lard has fallen out of favour with the British public, ever since research in the 1950s linked its high saturated fat content to heart disease.
It is also intensely calorific and contains 20 per cent more calories than butter on average.
However lard is in fact one of the richest sources of vitamin D and has 50 per cent more of the vitamin than butter, particularly if it is sourced from free-range pigs.