luchog
Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
That seemed to me a good example of some quite sensible sounding information. I have been trying to educate myself in this area, but am having a hard time finding my way around.
For health reasons I really need to make changes to my diet, but I am finding that the subject matter is a real woo-woo minefield. Even the supposedly authoritative sources appear to frequently contradict each other.
I am not looking to the group for dietary advice, per se, but rather some help in finding good sources of such. Recommendations for good books, for example, or sensible web sites.
Note that I have no philosophical objection to eating tasty animals, I'm looking at this purely from a health point of view.
Any suggestions gratefully received.
There is a lot of woo-woo and outdated information on both sides, pro- and anti-, and it can be hard to wade through at times.
The best thing to do for research is just get some good medical sources for info on necessities; and use FDA or similar government or academic sources for average nutritional content of various foodstuffs, and average daily intake requirements for various substances (amino acids, vitamins, minerals, etc.).
Again, it's really not rocket science; although you can certain turn it into that if you want. The best way to do it is to have soy products (that are not heavily processed) as the base staple of your diet; or if you're too sensitive to soy, just about any grain/legume combination will work just as well. You won't need to eat more of the staple than you do meat, and probably considerably less, since normal protein requirements are not that high -- moreso if you're pregnant, hypoglycemic or diabetic, or have other disorders which require a higher protein intake -- and Americans typically eat several times their daily requirement. Make sure to get a varied diet of fruits and vegetables; at least some fresh, as heat can break down certain vitamins (mostly C and some B) -- moreso if you use any substances that deplete vitamins (such as tobacco, coffee, and alcohol). If you're on a completely vegan diet, then you'll need a B12 supplement; but otherwise it's not necessary, since dairy and fish contain more than adequate levels of the vitamin. Essential fatty acids are available from a huge number of different sources, so they're not an issue at all.
It really is that simple.
The problem most vegans have had in the past is not necessarily a vegan diet; but the fact that most of them were also on some sort of fad diet as well, such as macrobiotics, "raw food", or similar diets that de-emphasized legumes and grain, and therefore lacked adequate protein sources.
The days of the scrawny, weak, sickly vegan stereotype are effectively over, though a few still exist due to the aforementioned dietary fads. Most of the vegans I know are, in fact, very healthy, or even overweight; the latter due mostly to their consumption of "vegan" junk foods containing large amounts of either hydrogenated oils, or vegetable oils naturally high in saturated fats, like Palm or Coconut.
Eating meat is far from a necessity. The strong reliance on meat as a primary staple in the Anglo-American diet is strictly cultural, a holdover from the days when a meat-heavy diet was a status symbol, a sign of wealth.