Where do you get your protein?

| 20 March 2017
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The basics

Protein, carbohydrates and fat are all essential constituents of the human diet, along with vitamins and minerals. Proteins are made up of building blocks called amino acids, some of which are called ‘essential amino acids’ – essential to include in your diet as your body can’t synthesise them.

Some foods contain all the amino acids that go to make up protein – soya and quinoa being the best-know examples – but pulses, such as peas, beans and lentils, nuts, seeds and wholegrains are excellent sources of protein and between them provide the full complement of amino acids.

Some nutrition ‘experts’ used to insist that it was essential to combine foods at every meal to obtain ‘complete’ protein but that thinking is outdated. A varied, healthy diet gives you all the protein you need.

Protein plays an important role in the body, forming the basis of muscle, hair, nails and collagen, the connective tissue that holds the body together. It also makes vital metabolic products: neurotransmitters, hormones, haem (found in red blood cells) and DNA.

When you eat protein, it is broken down into amino acids from which new proteins are built to perform each of these functions. Contrary to popular belief, you don’t build your muscles by eating an animal’s muscles (meat), they develop by being used – and the best diet to fuel this use is a varied, wholegrain vegan one.

The advantage of a vegan diet is that it provides all the good stuff (plant protein, complex carbohydrates, antioxidants and fibre) while avoiding the baddies (animal protein, saturated animal fats and cholesterol) which are linked to a heart disease, diabetes, obesity and some cancers. There are plenty of vegan athletes and body-builders who provide living proof of the power of plant protein!

How much protein do we need?

The World Health Organisation (WHO) says that protein should contribute just 10-15 per cent of your total calorie intake. The latest UK National Diet and Nutrition Survey found that in every age group – from young to old – the average protein intake met or exceeded this figure.

On average, men need around 55g and women 45g of protein daily. That’s about two palm-sized portions of tofu, nuts or pulses. Most people find it very easy to eat that much. On average, both men and women in the UK eat about 45-55 per cent more protein than they need. There is absolutely no advantage to eating more than you need; in fact, too much animal protein is harmful.

Mock meats made from vegetable protein are popular with vegetarians and vegans and contain similar levels of protein to their meaty equivalents. The protein in beef mince, sausage rolls, bacon rashers and frankfurters is the same as their vegan alternatives to within a gram or two.

One big difference is that vegan mock meats contain fibre, which meat doesn’t, and are not linked to cancer in the same way that processed and red meat is. That said, just as it’s unhealthy to eat lots of meat and dairy, it’s not a good idea to eat lots of processed foods as they tend to contain relatively high levels of fat and salt which can increase the risk of obesity and heart disease. Try swapping meat and dairy foods for a tofu steak, chick pea hummus or a lentil burger.

A medium portion of… Protein (g)
Sunflower seeds (1 tbsp) 3.2
Tahini (1 tsp) 3.5
Hummus (50g) 3.8
Peanut butter (20g) 4.5
Soya yogurt (125g pot) 4.5
Soya milk (200ml) 6.2
Wholemeal bread (2 medium slices) 6.2
Heinz baked beans (135g) 6.3
Brown rice, boiled (100g) 6.7
Almonds (15 almonds) 6.9
Quinoa, cooked (180g) 7.9
Wholemeal spaghetti (180g) 8.5
Baked potato with skin (large 220g) 8.6
Mixed nuts (40g) 9.2
Red lentils, cooked (135g) 10.3
Chickpeas, cooked (135g) 11.3
Cauldron Organic Original tofu (100g) 12.6
Taifun Smoked Tofu with Almonds & Sesame Seeds (100g) 18.8

All plant foods contain protein but some more than others. The table above shows just how easy it is to get 45-55g per day from a vegan diet. If you start the day with toast, hummus and cherry tomatoes; lunch on lentil dahl, spinach and a small portion of brown rice; and for dinner, have a medium baked potato with a vegan frankfurter and baked beans, your protein intake would be 58g.

On another day, toast and peanut butter for breakfast, two sausage rolls with a green salad for lunch and vegan spaghetti bolognaise for dinner, made with vegan mince, adds up to 46g. Alternatively, a medium-sized bowl of muesli with soya milk and a banana, a falafel and hummus wrap and a tofu-stir-fry with mixed seeds also adds up to 46g.

These suggestions don’t include drinks, soya milk or fruit so the final figure will be even higher. It’s simple – consume enough calories in a varied vegan diet and you’ll get the protein you need.

Animal vs plant protein

Plant protein differs from animal protein in a number of ways. Animal protein contains higher levels of sulphur, which puts more strain on kidneys and the metabolism. High intakes of animal protein have been linked to disease and early death. It could be because animal protein raises your levels of the growth hormone insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), which increases the risk of cancer.

Years of advertising and aggressive marketing of high-protein foods have fed into the myth that vegans somehow miss out when the opposite is true. Research consistently shows protein intake among vegans is more than sufficient while in meat-eaters, it frequently exceeds recommended intake levels by a considerable amount, potentially increasing the risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancer and osteoporosis.

Swapping animal protein for plant protein reduces the risk of all these diseases and several others, too. Eat a healthy vegan diet and you’ll get enough protein – plant protein – the good stuff!


This article first appeared in Vegan Food & Living magazine in March 2016.

For more information including a gram for gram comparison between meat products and meat-free foods as well as our informatve and fully-referenced fact sheet, see here.

About the author
Dr. Justine Butler
Justine joined Viva! in 2005 after graduating from Bristol University with a PhD in molecular biology. After working as a campaigner, then researcher and writer, she is now Viva!’s head of research and her work focuses on animals, the environment and health. Justine’s scientific training helps her research and write both in-depth scientific reports, such as White Lies and the Meat Report, as well as easy-to-read factsheets and myth-busting articles for consumer magazines and updates on the latest research. Justine also recently wrote the Vegan for the Planet guide for Viva!’s Vegan Now campaign.

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