Meatless meals: The benefits of eating less meat
Meatless meals are an easy way to eat healthy and save money.
It can be challenging to serve healthy meals on a budget, but with planning you can eat better for less. Many people save money by adding meatless meals to their weekly menus. Meatless meals are built around vegetables, beans and grains — instead of meat, which tends to be more expensive. Meatless meals also offer health benefits.
The health factor
A plant-based diet, which emphasizes fruits and vegetables, grains, beans and legumes, and nuts, is rich in fiber, vitamins and other nutrients. And people who eat only plant-based foods — aka, vegetarians — generally eat fewer calories and less fat, weigh less, and have lower cholesterol levels than do nonvegetarians.
Just eating less meat has a protective effect. A National Cancer Institute study of 500,000 people found that those who ate 4 ounces (114 grams) of red meat or more daily were 30 percent more likely to die of any cause over 10 years than were those who consumed less. Sausage, luncheon meats and other processed meats also increased the risk. Those who ate mostly poultry or fish had a lower risk of death.
How much protein do you need?
The fact is that most Americans get enough protein in their diets. Adults generally need 10 to 35 percent of their total daily calories to come from protein. Based on a 2,000-calorie-a-day diet, this amounts to about 50 to 175 grams a day. Of course, you can get protein from sources other than meat — sources that are often less expensive. Take a look at these examples:
- Eggs. A large egg has 6 grams of protein. At $2.16 for a dozen, a gram of protein from eggs costs 3 cents.
- Milk. A glass of milk has about 8 grams of protein. At $2.60 a half-gallon, that's a little more than 4 cents per gram of protein.
- Cottage cheese. Many cheeses are high in fat, and high priced, but cottage cheese provides a healthier alternative. And at $2.50 a pound (0.5 kg), a gram of protein from cottage cheese costs a little less than 5 cents a gram.
- Tofu. At $2.00 a pound (0.5 g), you pay just 6 cents for a gram of protein.
Try meatless meals once or twice a week
You don't have to go cold turkey. Instead, try easing into meatless meals. Consider going meatless one day a week. If you don't like the idea of a whole day without meat, start with a couple of meatless dinners each week. Plan meals that feature entrees you like that are typically meatless, such as lasagna, soup or pasta salad. Or try substituting the following protein-rich foods for meat in your favorite recipes:
- Beans and legumes — great in casseroles and salads
- Vegetarian refried beans — good substitute for meat in burritos and tacos
- Tofu — perfect addition to stir-fry dishes
When meat is on the menu
When your meals include meat, don't overindulge. A serving of protein should be no more than 3 ounces (85 grams) — or about the size of a deck of cards — and should take up no more than a fourth of your dinner plate. Vegetables and fruits should cover half your plate, with whole grains filling in the rest.
Flexing for your health
The term "flexitarian" has been coined to describe someone who eats mostly plant-based foods but occasionally eats meat, poultry and fish. That kind of healthy eating is the heart of the Mediterranean diet — which limits red meat and emphasizes fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains and healthy fats — and has been shown to reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease and other chronic conditions. Why not work on your flexibility and start reaping some healthy benefits?
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I'm actually a bit of a vegetarian, I eat chicken and fish.
The truth is our teeth weren't actually I guess you ould say designed to chew meat.
And if we all became vegetarians again, the population of animals would actually go down. People in like slaughter houses breed the animals so we have more meat. They don't just reproduce all those animals by themselves.
I think the world would be a better place if we all turned vegetarians. Not just for the animals but for our weight and health!
[[Also got a kick out of this whole discussion...Human teeth are patently NOT for tearing into meat. Cats' teeth are for such a thing...Human teeth are a collection of grinding stones (molars and bicuspids) with a small row of clippers (incisors) in front. "Canine" teeth in humans (cuspids) are pathetic hints of the true canine teeth of our feline and lupine friends. These teeth in humans could not "tear into meat" as you suggest...]]
While I agree that teeth types have no bearing on the omnivorous nature of man's true diet, your statements about man's canine teeth are actually not true. Man's canine teeth have no more to do with an ancestry to dogs than they do with an ancestry to walruses. In fact, many animals have canine teeth and some of the most notable canine teeth have nothing to do with tearing into meat. Walruses use their canines for locomotion on the ice and scooping seaweed while boars use their canines (that's right canines not tusks) for mating purposes. The fact that some animals use their canines for tearing food does not mean this is the main reason for this set of teeth. In fact, your whole argument that man has molars and incisors for grinding up plant food is ludicrous. I use my incisors as a staple remover, should I be living on a diet of metal alloys? Those teeth are really good for that though! Our teeth are multifunctional and can be used to rip, bite, chew, grind, pull, and for all intents and purposes masticate a variety of materials both organic and inorganic. Seems to me that doesn't really lean us toward any one category or another save to say "multifunctional".
[[Um, do you actually hunt all your own food? What you're saying might be correct for deer in certain areas, but most people eat animals that have been deliberately bred for that purpose only. ]]
You are correct in your assumption; however, your point completely missed mine. Your point is that if we stopped eating meat we would stop breeding all of those animals purely for the reason of eating meat. But do those animals stop reproducing themselves? So no more animal sex because hey we don't eat them anymore? LOL Animal populationswill continue to grow whether they are bred or not and then who is going to control the population? Oh wait I guess we will have to and what will we do with those dead animal carcasses? Maybe eat the meat? Hmmm...great idea!
[[And I would imagine you would lose a lot of weight on one egg plus one orange a day.]]
LOL I didn't say that was all you should eat in a day. There's more to a healthy diet than vitamins and minerals! ![]()
Also got a kick out of this whole discussion. As if your teeth had anything to do with the matter. Any doubt look at a bears diet don't think thier mouth fits into the omnivore catagory under the below disctiption but sure enough many of them enjoy the omnivore diet.
"I am a carnivore. My teeth are designed for tearing into meat, and I'm going to use them."
This is an uninformed statement. Human teeth are patently NOT for tearing into meat. Cats' teeth are for such a thing. Do you have teeth like a cat, or a dog? No, you do not. Human teeth are a collection of grinding stones (molars and bicuspids) with a small row of clippers (incisors) in front. "Canine" teeth in humans (cuspids) are pathetic hints of the true canine teeth of our feline and lupine friends. These teeth in humans could not "tear into meat" as you suggest.
If one is equipped with clippers and grinding stones, as humans are, one is best suited to a plant-based diet.
Your argument--not mine. You're the one who wanted to talk about teeth.
Bah all these diet fads and crap these people are advertising are pointless. It's very simple for 98% of the people in the world if you take in fewer calories than you burn you'll lose weight. Plain and simple. Sure the remaining 2% that actually have a medical problem can normally get drugs that will help regulate their problem to the point where the above formula will work for them to. This is regardless of if you eat meat or don't. I eat eggs and bacon for breakfast, sandwich meat for lunch and assorted dinners and in the last 6 months regulating quantities of what I ate and adding 20-30 minutes of moderate exercise 4-6 times a week, I’ve managed to lose 40lbs. No miracle pills or magic berry elixirs needed just took responsibility for what I ate and got off my butt and did some exercises. This same plan could work for anyone else in the world.
Even lean people have heart, cholesterol and diabetes problems. To loose weight, doesn't mean that you're healthy 100%. If you study the Asian diet vs. the American diet, their diet is based on more soy products, legumes, beans, whole wheat, fish and few red meat. That doesn't mean that they don't suffer heart attacks or don't have any other related conditions, but compared to the american diet well the percentage is lower than the US. More than doing exercises (cuz OBVIOUSLY you're gonna loose weight if your doing exercises) you gotta watch what you eat since it's the way to choose between a good or bad health. If your diet is based on fast foods, dont pretend to have a healthy way of live! You are what you eat and that also includes what that animal was fed on.
I've been looking for some good vegetarian recipe books. Specifically, I would like simple meals that can be made in a fair amount of time without a lot of special equipment or specialty ingredients. Anyone have a recommendation?
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