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The battle of butter vs. margarine

The 100-plus year war between butter and margarine, America's two favorite fatty spreads, has been a battle of cultural norms, nutritional headwinds, a bit of circumstance, and, of course, cash rich marketing campaigns.

At times the tussle has proved a tad lopsided — for more than 50 years margarine seemed markedly outmatched. Back in 1911, the average American ate almost 19 pounds of butter per year, the most ever, according to the USDA. Meanwhile, back then margarine consumption barely broke a single pound per person per year. Among the butter industry's many efforts to mitigate the growth of the competing spread was a mandate, upheld in many states, disallowing the sale of yellow margarine. In an effort to circumvent the restriction, clear margarine blocks were often sold with a side of yellow dye.

World World II, however, brought butter shortages and, with them, the rise of butter's arch nemesis. It wasn't until 1957, when Americans ate as much margarine as they did butter — 8.5 pounds per year — that margarine, which was marketed as both a healthier and cheaper butter alternative, opened the spread in its favor. Fat had become a food faux pas, and the margarine industry used its widening wallet to tout margarine's supposed health appeal.

“The massive advertising of health claims for margarine transformed a generally disreputable product of inferior quality and flavor into a great commercial success,” William G. Rothstein wrote in his book “Public Health and the Risk Factor.”

Even Eleanor Roosevelt came to margarine's aid. “That's what I've spread on my toast,” she said in a 1959 commercial for Good Luck margarine.

The thing about advertising is that it often works. For some 50 years thereafter, it was butter that was left to congeal in the fridge. In 1976, at the peak of America's love affair with margarine, per capita consumption towered to just under 12 pounds per year, or nearly three times that of butter, according to the USDA.

Today, however, amid a complete reversal in both consumer preferences and nutritional science — recent studies have challenged the notion that consuming saturated fats is tied to greater risks of heart disease — margarine's marketing efforts have lost their appeal and the narratives have reversed themselves. Growing concerns over processed foods and a simultaneous, and ferocious, revival of the American appetite for natural fats has turned the tables — and this time, seemingly, for good. Even one of the world's largest margarine makers has conceded as much.

After announcing the return of butter back in March, Mark Bittman this month wrote in defense of real food and real fats. “Eat real food and your fat intake will probably be fine,” he said.

If America's taste in fatty spreads is any indication, the country seems to have already caught on. Butter consumption is up more than 21 percent since its lowest reading in 1997, while margarine consumption is down 70 percent since its peak in the mid-1970s. Put another way, the average American hasn't eaten this much butter since 1972, or — and perhaps more incredibly — this little margarine since 1942.

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