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calories and sodium also dropped, while the percentage who checked labels for sugar

held steady at 41 percent.

Petaluma dairy producer Clover Stornetta Farms saw that trend play out in sales of

organic full-fat milk, yogurt and other dairy products, which saw double-digit increases

in

2015

and

2016.

Because organic products are typically bought by more health­

conscious shoppers, the attraction to these products is probably due to the fact that they

are less processed, director of marketing Kristel Corson says.

For example, nonfat milk often contains milk powder in addition to liquid milk, and

low-fat yogurt is frequently thickened with pectin, which gives it more of a gelatinous

quality, rather than the naturally creamy texture of regular yogurt.

In response to consumer interest in richer dairy products, the company has a new line of

Greek yogurts and will soon introduce a European-style butter, which has a higher

percentage of fat than the standard kind.

A selection of cheeses displayed at the Cheese Board Collective in Berkeley. Nina Teicholz, author of

"The Big Fat Surprise," has concluded that saturated fats, including cheese, actually leads to better

health.

Another reason many people are returning to full-fat products is their increased satiety,

in ways we often don't even fully realize. As Bay Area food scientist Ali Bouzari writes in

his new book, "Ingredient: Unveiling the Essential Elements of Food," it's actually

aroma - the building block of flavor - that is carried by fat more than flavor itself.