Cholesterol warnings have a way of flattening any nutrition story into one scary number, even when the bigger picture points the other way. We take on one of our favorite topics coffee and zoom in on the debate that keeps resurfacing: should you avoid unfiltered coffee because it contains cafestol, a compound known to raise cholesterol modestly?
We break down what actually changes when you switch from filtered coffee to unfiltered coffee methods like French press or Turkish coffee. Paper filters remove much of the coffee oil fraction, including diterpenes such as cafestol and kahweol, while leaving plenty of other valuable compounds like chlorogenic acids. Then we ask the more important question: if coffee consistently shows protective associations for cardiovascular health, metabolic health, and even brain health, why do so many public health messages treat a small lipid bump as the final verdict?
From endothelial function and inflammation to insulin sensitivity, fat oxidation, and LDL oxidation resistance, we explore why cafestol may be far more beneficial than the headlines suggest. We also connect this coffee debate to a broader problem in modern nutrition and medicine: prioritising a single biomarker over lived outcomes and overall risk. Finally, we get practical about brew choices, lighter roasts, steep time, and the easiest way to ruin a great cup by adding sugar, synthetic creamers, or highly processed sweeteners.
If you love coffee, keep loving it !
The Association between Cafestol and Cardiovascular Diseases- A Comprehensive Review
