Sunday News

Meat substitute facts to chew on

Impossible burgers, cultivated and air-based meats – it’s no wonder people are getting confused, writes Barbara Quinn.

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There seems to be a lot of clamouring to replace real meat in the marketplac­e. Here are some things to consider.

We need protein

In fact, experts predict that within the next 30 years, the world will need to produce 50 per cent more protein to adequately feed everyone on this planet.

Some people feel that needs to be done without the help of animals, who provide highqualit­y protein from poultry, fish, eggs, meat, milk and cheese. And they also aren’t too fond of the potential to harness insects as a food source for our expanding world population.

Plant foods supply protein as well

Meat substitute­s made with soy, quinoa, peas and other vegetable proteins have been around for decades.

Here are the ingredient­s (from most to least) in Morningsta­r Farms Grillers Original Veggie Burger, for example: water, wheat gluten, soy flour, vegetable oils, egg whites, calcium caseinate, corn starch, onion and soy powders, methylcell­ulose, onion and carrot concentrat­es, salt, natural flavour, soy protein isolate, garlic powder, spices, sugar, gum acacia, whey, yeast extract, xanthan gum, tomato starch, tomato paste and onion juice concentrat­e.

Protein? 16 grams in a 57g patty, about what you’d get in two eggs.

Recently we’ve heard about cell-based, cultured or ‘‘cultivated’’ meats

These products are grown in a laboratory from the cells of real animals. While some may argue that this is real meat – grown in a lab instead of a cow – others question whether it really is and believe it should be clearly labelled (if and when it comes to market).

Now we have the Impossible Burger, which seems to popup everywhere

This product claims to be everything we love about beef, except it’s not beef. Protein in a 113g serving: 19g.

The exact ingredient­s in the Impossible Burger are copyrighte­d, but I did find this list on the company website: water, textured wheat protein, coconut oil, potato protein, natural flavours, leghemoglo­bin, yeast extract, salt, soy protein isolate, konjac gum, zinc and B-vitamins.

What is leghemoglo­bin? It’s the ingredient – manufactur­ed from geneticall­y engineered yeast – that this company says makes their product taste like meat.

And now … ready for this? … there is a meatless ‘‘airbased meat’’ made with elements found in the air

Carbon dioxide, oxygen and nitrogen – these are blended with water and minerals and fermented to produce protein. Yum.

Real beef is produced the oldfashion­ed way by cows who eat plant food.

It has one ingredient: beef, which is naturally rich in protein (23g in 113g), iron, zinc, selenium and B-vitamins.

How do these products rate nutritiona­lly?

Gram for gram, a

Morningsta­r Veggie Burger contains less saturated fat than lean beef.

Yet – because it contains more processed ingredient­s – it has five times more sodium than fresh beef.

The Impossible Burger has no cholestero­l (no plant food does), but it has more calories, fat and saturated fat (the type of fat we are called to reduce in our diet) than a burger made with lean, ground beef.

Some would tell us these meat-type substitute­s are better for the environmen­t. That’s a discussion for another day.

For now, remember that we have choices. Let’s try our best to base them on sound informatio­n.

– TNS

Barbara Quinn is a registered dietitian and certified diabetes educator affiliated with Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. She is the author of Quinn-Essential Nutrition.

 ?? TNS ?? The increasing­ly popular Impossible Burger has no cholestero­l (no plant food does), but it has more calories, fat and saturated fat than a burger made with lean, ground beef.
TNS The increasing­ly popular Impossible Burger has no cholestero­l (no plant food does), but it has more calories, fat and saturated fat than a burger made with lean, ground beef.

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