But
Isn't Meat Protein Superior to Plant Protein?
By Dr. Leslie Van Romer
Haven’t you always thought that meat protein was superior
to plant protein, and that you had to eat meat protein to get “complete”
protein for your health and fitness?
And the only
way you could get so-called “complete” protein from
plant foods was to mix and match certain plant sources of food?
This is certainly
what we were all raised to believe, isn’t it? In fact, most
Americans, to this day, still believe in the superiority and the
absolute necessity of animal protein for health and fitness.
In spite of
what the egg, dairy, and meat industries, along with our government
and many experts, have told us all these years, meat protein is
not superior to plant protein: protein is protein is protein is
protein, no matter what source provides the protein.
Whether a certain
essential amino acid, the building block of protein, is provided
by a plant or animal, it is the same amino acid.
Furthermore,
contrary to what many people accept as truth, we do not have to
mix and match plant proteins to make a so-called “complete”
protein.
If you have
any doubts about getting enough protein through plant foods, just
look at the animal kingdom.
How many elephants,
cows, horses, giraffes, or apes eat cows, chicken, or fish to get
enough protein?
How many of
these large mammals mix and match plant sources of foods to get
complete proteins?
If these animals
with great, big strong muscles can eat a diet of plant foods, and
not a large variety at that, and get plenty of protein, so can we.
When in doubt,
look to nature for answers; not to those people or industries who
have an economic interest in certain sources of food, such as the
meat, egg, dairy, sugar, and cereal industries. You may be familiar
with the popular book from the 1970s, Diet for a Small Planet. This
book promoted the theory that we have to mix and match plant proteins
to get “complete” proteins, such as eating rice and
beans together at the same meal.
Here is an interesting
fact that you may not be aware of.
The author of
this book, Frances Moore Lappe, rescinded her “mix-and-match”
theory in the early 1980s. She herself said that she had unintentionally
misled her readers. She acknowledged the fact that we do indeed
get enough protein by eating a variety of plant foods, without consciously
combining certain plant foods at one meal.
Do you wonder
why you have never heard that plant sources of protein are complete
in themselves? Perhaps it has something to do with the power of
commercial interest groups.
The World Health
Organization recommends that our diets consist of 5% protein—that’s
all.
Oranges have
plenty of protein—8%. Romaine has plenty of protein—34%.
Oatmeal has plenty of protein—15%. Brown rice (8% protein),
cantaloupe (9%), carrots (10%), cucumbers (24%), tomatoes (16%),
spinach (49%), broccoli (33%)—all of our fresh fruits and
vegetables, whole grains, and beans have plenty of protein for human
health and fitness.
The fact is,
sometimes it’s hard to hear the truth above the roar of the
egg, milk, and meat industries, the cultural norm, and our own attachment
to the foods we have learned to love to eat.
But, if you
listen closely with an open mind, you will become more and more
skilled at sorting fact from fiction.
More importantly,
as you become more aware, you will consciously make healthier food
and lifestyle choices for the lifetime reward of health and fitness,
comfort, mobility, joy, hope, and purpose.
Dr. Leslie Van
Romer is a health motivational speaker, writer, and lifestyle coach.
Visit http://www.DrLeslieVanRomer.com for more inspiration.
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