consciouseating On The
Americans say they are trying to reduce their meat intake. Vegan advocates, who include celebrities like Alicia Silverstone, Tobey Maguire and Woody Harrelson, sup- port a robust vegan infrastructure, with new cookbooks and gourmet recipes, hip new restaurants and an explosion of websites and chat rooms devoted to a plant-based lifestyle. Some omnivores doubt that people can be either healthy or satisfied without the nutrients and flavor of animal prod- ucts. After all, didn’t we evolve from meat eaters? Yes, our hunter-gatherer forbears may have liked meat, explain some experts, but it comprised only a tiny part of their diet—those animals were hard to catch. Instead, early humans subsisted largely on wild vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds. Milk and cheese didn’t become a diet staple until 10,000 years ago, and then only in Europe.
WHY PEOPLE ARE PUTTING
MORE PLANTS ON THEIR PLATES by Kristin Ohlson
B
ased upon what he observed at a plantation in Hawaii on his first job out of medical school, California physi- cian John McDougall has eaten a vegan diet for 35 years. There, he cared for workers hailing from China, Japan, Korea and the Philippines, and quickly noticed that first-gen- eration immigrants didn’t have the diseases he’d been trained to treat: no heart disease, no diabetes, no cancer, no arthritis. How- ever, he saw more evidence of these condi- tions with each succeeding generation, as the workers increasingly indulged in standard American fare.
“My first-generation patients kept to the diet they had eaten in their home coun- tries,” McDougall says. “They lived on rice and vegetables, with very little meat and no dairy. But, as their kids started to eat burgers and shakes, the kids got fatter and sicker.” Accounts like this contribute to the fact
Author Virginia Messina, a registered dietitian with a master’s degree in public health, based in Port Townsend, Washington, says her research for the American Dietetic As- sociation confirms that vegetarians overall have lower levels of bad cholesterol, less obesity and a lower incidence of both hypertension and colon cancer than meat-eaters. Vegans have even lower cholesterol and blood pressure than veg- etarians who eat eggs and dairy.
The American Institute for Cancer Research
recommends avoiding processed meat and eating no more than
the equivalent of six 3-ounce servings.
that today, as many as 8 million Americans say that they are vegetarians, according to a 2009 Harris Interactive survey commissioned by The Vegetarian Resource Group. Of these, about a third are vegans, who avoid meat, eggs and dairy products, as well as meat. Many choose a plant-based diet for better health; others, because they believe it’s more humane and environmentally conscious. According to the Natural Marketing Institute, as many as 30 percent of
48 Collier/Lee Counties ~ Elaine Magee,
WebMD.com
But eschewing animal products only leads to improved health if people follow some basic guidelines. Vegans must be sure to eat a variety of whole grains, beans, legumes, nuts and seeds—good sources of protein—as well as fruits and vegetables. (Messina notes that the average person needs about 55 grams of protein a day, about half that ingested in a typical America diet.) And, while plant diets are generally rich in iron, Messina notes that vegans need to make sure that the iron is well absorbed by eating a diet rich in vitamin C—leafy greens, as well as citrus, peppers, potatoes, melons and tomatoes. She reminds vegans to get enough zinc in their diets with nuts, seeds and seed butters like tahini. Some nutritionists suggest that vegans take a vitamin B12
supplement, as well as a
500 grams (18 ounces) of red meat a week,
calcium supplement.
Vegans insist that giving up these animal products doesn’t mean giving up the plea- sures of food. Perhaps no vegan chef has done more to convince skeptics than Isa Chandra Moskowitz, with cookbooks like Vegan with a Vengeance, Veganomicon, and Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World. (She also founded the Post Punk Kitchen vegan website with free recipes at theppk. com). Many of her recipes take fewer than 45 minutes to pre- pare, often from inexpensive ingredients. “It’s an economi- cal way to eat,” she says. “It’s the way poor people have always eaten.”
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