Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I’m trying to quit cold turkey.

  • Hey there meat wads, Julian here for DNews.

  • For many of us in the United States, Thanksgiving means putting up with our relatives long enough

  • to grab some of that sweet, sweet turkey and honey glazed ham.

  • But for someone who has dietary restrictions or objections to eating animals, even that

  • simple holiday pleasure is denied.

  • Unless of course, they replace it with a turkey made of tofu (a tofurky) or a ham made of

  • some sort of meat analogue (a hamalogue).

  • On a nutritional level though, do these meat substitutes have the chops to replace the

  • real thing?

  • It’s hard to pin down exactly how healthy meat analogues are because there are quite

  • a few ways to skin a cator cowor tofurkey.

  • There’s risofu made of rice, tempeh made of soy, and a wheat-gluten product called

  • seitan, so yes, some vegetarian dishes are literally the spawn of seitan.

  • But the one most familiar to non-vegetarians is tofu, made from coagulated soy milk that’s

  • pressed into blocks.

  • For nutritional value, tofu and meat can trade punches all day long.

  • Meat is the muscle tissue of an animal and contains a lot more protein than tofu.

  • According to the United States Department of Agriculture, gram for gram 80% lean ground

  • beef has more than double the protein of tofu, while chicken contains over triple the protein.

  • On the other hand, both those meats have nearly triple the fat as tofu, and processed meats

  • like sausage have way more fat, sometimes even more fat than protein.

  • Plus tofu’s fat is mostly unsaturated, which is better for lowering cholesterol.

  • Your body can happily use tofu to make proteins because tofu contains the 9 essential amino

  • acids you can’t make on your own, but there are some things faux meat can’t do as well

  • as the real thing.

  • For instance, tofu is higher in iron than chicken, but the iron in chicken and other

  • meat is bundled up in heme, aka the red pigment in your blood that binds to oxygen and gives

  • hemoglobin its name.

  • I think it goes without saying that plants don’t have blood, so the iron in tofu is

  • nonheme and isn’t as easily used.

  • To get the most iron out of non-meat sources, it’s necessary to supplement them with vitamin

  • C, which combines with the iron in a form your body more readily absorbs.

  • Speaking of vitamins, a meat-free diet makes it really difficult to get enough vitamin

  • B12, so if youre eating tofurky or the Ham of Seitan youll need a way to supplement

  • it.

  • A B12 deficiency can have a host of symptoms like tiredness, numbness, tingling, vision

  • loss, constipation, and diarrhea (though obviously not at the same time for those last two).

  • A vegetarian won’t necessarily have to worry about that because B12 is still present in

  • eggs and dairy products but vegans eat absolutely no animal products.

  • There are dairy substitutes like soy or almond milk but theyre still missing that essential

  • vitamin unless theyre fortified with it.

  • As long as theyre careful about filling in the gaps of a meat-free diet, vegetarians

  • and vegans should be able to feast with their carnivorous relatives and still have a balanced

  • diet.

  • One day though, there may be meat that’s completely cruelty free because it was grown

  • in a petri dish, eliminating the need for the president to pardon a turkey ever again.

  • Now whether or not vegetarians and vegans will accept these meat clones because of their

  • unnaturalnature is another matter altogether.

  • So you're body can get along just fine without the real meat but your tastebuds know the

  • difference.

  • Unless we can trick them!

  • To find out more about meatless meat, check out Seeker Stories video right there.

  • Have you tried the faux fowl or would you rather talk and eat real turkey?

  • Let us know in the comments, subscribe for more and I will see you all next time on DNews.

  • Happy Thanksgiving!

I’m trying to quit cold turkey.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it