A Year Without Palm Oil

Adrien Gontier, a Ph.D student in geochemistry, posing in front of the periodic table. (Photo: vivresanshuiledepalme.blogspot.fr)

Adrien Gontier, a Ph.D student in geochemistry, posing in front of the periodic table. (Photo: vivresanshuiledepalme.blogspot.fr)

If you eat cookies or cupcakes, or if you even use cosmetics, chances are good that you’re consuming palm oil.

The stuff is everywhere these days, and it’s also very controversial.

Oil palm plantations have been blamed for widespread deforestation in Southeast Asia.

Some palm oil growers have begun to clean up their act, but many people think the industry isn’t changing fast enough.

Among them is a young Frenchman who set out to go a whole year without consuming palm oil.

Turned out to be a tricky proposition because palm oil shows up in lots of products.

Take Nutella, for example, that creamy chocolate and hazelnut spread that many kids, especially in Europe, eat for breakfast.

A morning at my house may go like this:

ME: Hey what do you boys want for breakfast?

Boys: Nutellaaaaaa!!!!!

Okay, I admit it. My sons Felix and Victor often ask for Nutella on toast, pancakes, and rice cakes.

I asked Felix what he likes best about Nutella and he answered “I’d go with the chocolate part, it’s very chocolaty.” Victor likes that it’s very smooth and creamy.

That creamy-ness comes from palm oil. Not that I ever thought Nutella was a healthy snack. And I do feel a bit guilty letting my children have Nutella so often. But now that I have seen a photo of “deconstructed” Nutella, I may stop serving it altogether.

The picture was taken by Adrien Gontier, a Ph.D student in geochemistry in Strasbourg, France. He figured out the proportions for the ingredients in Nutella, and stacked them in easy-to-see layers in a jar. The visual is pretty striking: thin layers of powdered milk, powdered hazelnuts and cocoa, and a thick layer of sugar, roughly 40 percent of the spread. There’s another thick layer … of oil — Nutella’s roughly 20 percent palm oil.

Now, palm oil is high in saturated fat.

But Gontier says didn’t give up palm oil for a year out of concern for his health.

“It was really because of my concern for the environment,” he said. “In fact, I also stopped buying soaps, shampoos, toothpaste, and cleaning products that contain palm oil.”

Gontier says he’s concerned about deforestation in Southeast Asia where most of the world’s palm oil is produced and its impact on biodiversity and water resources there.

So Gontier went palm-oil free last July.

It proved more difficult than he anticipated because many major brands use it. Gontier said he found it in Pringles, Kellogg’s and Ferrero–which makes Nutella– Oreo cookies, Nestle, and Häagen-Dazs. Though Gontier notes that palm oil isn’t in every product marketed by these brands. But he says many French chocolates, packaged breads, cookies, store-bought pie doughs, sauces and baby-formulas contain it. Gontier even found it in some packaged raisins. He studied labels carefully, but he says it wasn’t always possible to tell whether palm oil was an ingredient.

So Gontier’s first step was to give up processed foods and cook fresh ingredients at home. And when it came to eating in restaurants, he said he was very selective about his entrees. “I would order a salad rather than dishes with sauce or quiches and other pies,” he said.

In spite of all his efforts, Gontier says half way through the year, he realized his car was also a palm oil consumer. Diesel fuel, which is used widely in European cars, can contain up to 10% vegetable fuel, and 1% generally comes from palm oil.

Gontier has now completed his palm-oil-free year, but he still avoids it when he can. He says he plans to write a book about his year, but only after he finishes his doctoral thesis.

For now, Gontier has put together a little guide book .. in French .. on how to steer clear of palm oil products.

And he also came up with a recipe for home-made Nutella.

“I used hazelnuts, cocoa” he said,” and agave syrup as a substitute for palm oil.”

Gontier says the consistency is just right — not too soupy, not too solid. Just creamy.

Hmm… Maybe something to try at home with the kids.


Recipe for Homemade version of ‘Nutella’
This is converted from grams in a French recipe so some slight modifications may be required, adjust to taste.

Adrien Gontier's own reconstruction of the five ingredients in Nutella, the chocolate hazelnut spread.  Starting from the bottom: Powdered milk, powdered cocoa, powdered hazelnuts, palm oil and sugar. (Photo: vivresanshuiledepalme.blogspot.fr)

Adrien Gontier's own reconstruction of the five ingredients in Nutella, the chocolate hazelnut spread. Starting from the bottom: Powdered milk, powdered cocoa, powdered hazelnuts, palm oil and sugar. (Photo: vivresanshuiledepalme.blogspot.fr)

powdered milk: 25g (about one ounce).

Cocoa powder: 60 g (about 2.5 oz)

Powdered hazelnuts: 95 g (about 3 oz)

Agave syrup: 100 g (roughly 3.5 oz)

Sugar cane syrup: (50 g water et 100g cane sugar) = cane syrup made with 3.5 oz cane sugar and 1.75 oz water.

Gontier says his home-made chocolate and hazelnut spread contains no fat and less sugar than the store-bought kind.

Discussion

16 comments for “A Year Without Palm Oil”

  • MortSBM

    Your Nutella recipe may be blessedly free of palm oil, and perhaps it has less sugar than the store-bought version, but are you aware that processed Agave syrup is essentially high-fructose corn syrup? You might as well serve a kid a sandwich made from Milky Way bars.

  • http://twitter.com/ForGrammaAlice ForGrammaAlice

    Great story and very important info. I am a French-to-English translator based in San Francisco and would gladly translate the guidebook he wrote, free of charge. Please let me know where I can find it. Merci!

    • 141285

      you can write me an e-mail at : vivresanshuiledepalme at laposte.net
      :-)

    • 141285

      you can write me an e-mail at : vivresanshuiledepalme at laposte.net
      :-)

  • Frodo7

    Adrien Gontier, your desire to be Palm Oil free, is no doubt; wise. However; substituting Agave Syrup, is not wise at all. Agave Syrup is a very nasty substance, it turns out; sickeningly sweet though it be. 
    When you learn about it’s true nature, you will agree; and avoiding it yourself, you would never recommend it to anyone. Dear Adrien and everyone; please read this report:.
    http://www.westonaprice.org/modern-foods/agave-nectar-worse-than-we-thought
     

    • 141285

      You can replace this syrup by an an other product like can sugar, honey etc.

  • Liz Renner

    I listened with great interest to the story which aired last night on the East Coast of the U.S. However, I was disappointed that the story didn’t mention some important species affected by deforestation in Indonesia: orangutans, pygmy elephants, tigers, proboscis and macaque monkeys, etc. These species are unique and are being devastated by clear-cutting of forests for palm oil plantations.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=570403983 Sabine Yenen

    congrats

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=704331877 Joanne Pope

    We will be trying your home made version of nutella soon so i will let you know how we fair. My 10 year old son loves Orangutans & has already given up eating his favourite biscuits. Its disappointing its in Nutella as well. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/philip.graham Phil Graham

    There are a lot of serious enviro-issues about felling rainforest to grow palm oil. But to quote “As a member of the RSPO (Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil), Ferrero only uses palm oil which is extracted from controlled plantations in Malaysia.”  Maybe the student needs to study a bit harder.  Oh, and the palm oil in Nutella is reduced in saturated fats.

    • AdrienFr

      It’s nice to see these people believe everything and anything. You should found more informations about RSPO and their “controlled plantations”. Maybe Phil needs to study…just begin.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/3YL46NIP7ND4INNCJNMJ3Z4XO4 Frank Stanford

    Just for the record, palm kernel oil, while a saturated fat, is a medium chain triglyceride.  MCT’s are actually healthy and help you lose weight by releasing fat from fat cells into the blood stream to be used as energy.  The deforestation thing is another issue….not good.

  • http://www.facebook.com/lorena.blancolopez Lorena Blanco López

    I’m not eatting nutella anymore since I knew about this all (more than 7 months now), and with this I also stopped buying many other products that content palm oil.. BUT THE BIGGEST PROBLEM is that many other products don’t say if they contact palm oil, they use “vegetable oil” in their tags so you never can be sure, just a small percentage of them really says “coconut oil” or “sunflower oil”.. as a result now I buy almost nothing!! make my own choco-pasta at home and I’ve lost 5. The cosmetics is a big problem tho.. besides that I also check if they are not tested in animals and again is something else not easy to find on their tags.. :(

  • http://www.facebook.com/lorena.blancolopez Lorena Blanco López

     Oh, ofc, I didn’t stop only with Nutella but with any Ferrero product as they are the owners of Nutella. I don’t mind if they don’t use palm oil in the other products they sell. NOT WITH MY MONEY

  • http://www.facebook.com/lorena.blancolopez Lorena Blanco López

    I’m not eatting nutella anymore since I knew about this all (more than 7
    months now), and with this I also stopped buying many other products
    that content palm oil.. BUT THE BIGGEST PROBLEM is that many other
    products don’t say if they contact palm oil, they use “vegetable oil” in
    their tags so you never can be sure, just a small percentage of them
    really says “coconut oil” or “sunflower oil”.. as a result now I buy
    almost nothing!! make my own choco-pasta at home and I’ve lost 5. The
    cosmetics is a big problem tho.. besides that I also check if they are
    not tested in animals and again is something else not easy to find on
    their tags.. :(

    Oh, ofc, I didn’t stop only with Nutella but with any Ferrero product
    as they are the owners of Nutella. I don’t mind if they don’t use palm
    oil in the other products they sell. NOT WITH MY MONEY

  • http://www.facebook.com/lorena.blancolopez Lorena Blanco López

    I stopped eating Nutella when I knew about this all (7 months ago now). I also don’t use/buy many other products that now I know they are made with this oil also. BUT THE BIGGEST PROBLEM is that is many of them you are not able to find it since thet use the tag “vegetable oil” and that can be any.. just a few of them use “coconut oil” or “sunflower oil” on they tags. So as a result not I buy almost nothing, make my own “choco-pasta” at home and I’ve lost more than 5kg. Another problem for me is the cosmetics (mostly shampoo and shower gel that is the only I use) because I also like to make sure that they haven’t been tested in animals but it’s something else not easy to find on their tags. I think they should change whatever law that they follow to tag they produtcs and make sure that the client knows exactly what is getting. Only then it can be our responsability.

    Oh, ofc, I didn’t stop only with Nutella but with any Ferrero product
    as they are the owners of Nutella. I don’t mind if they don’t use palm
    oil in the other products they sell. NOT WITH MY MONEY