Let's face it. If you are looking for cold pressed enteric omega 3 fatty acids from fish oil, you would be hard-pressed to find it. I'm not sure that it actually exists, although some manufacturers might use the term. Cold-pressing Spartagen XT Review is a designation generally used to describe oils that come from seeds, nuts or olives.
The description simply means that the oils are extracted without the use of chemical solvents or high temperatures. Most fish oils are molecular distilled in order to reduce impurities, such as mercury, arsenic and lead, as well as chemical contaminants like PCBs. Molecular distillation does create some heat. There is no way around that. But, the heat is low enough as to not cause the oils to burn, smoke or become rancid.
That's one of the reasons that the process is used. The fishmeal industry is huge. It is used to feed livestock, make pet food and feed the farmed fishes. In order to make fishmeal, as much of the oil as possible, is removed. In order to make fishmeal, the fish must first be cooked. So, finding cold pressed enteric omega 3 from fish oils is unlikely. It might even be impossible.
http://www.nomorefakereviews.com/spartagen-xt-review/
Flax seeds could be cold-pressed to get at their omega-3s, but they contain a different type that those that are found in fatty fish and seafood. Only ALA (alpha-linolenic acid) is found in vegetable oils. It is DHA and EPA that have been the subjects of scientific studies. As far as we can tell, the health benefits that accompany DHA and EPA do not accompany ALA.
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