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Soy Burgers, Soy Chunks, Soy Protein Isolates
4 Nov 2020
Disclaimer
Soy chunks, soy burgers and isolated soy proteins are not traditional Asian preparations; they are produced in a modern industrial setting. What do Whole Food Plant-Based docs say about these products?
Soy Chunks, Soy Nuggets, Nutri Nuggets, Meal Maker

Soy chunks are TSP (Textured Soy Protein) or TVP (Textured Vegetable Protein), created through a modern industrial process developed in 1960s in USA. Wikipedia article explains

"Textured or texturized vegetable protein (TVP), also known as textured soy protein (TSP), soy meat, or soya chunks is a defatted soy flour product, a by-product of extracting soybean oil. It is often used as a meat analogue or meat extender. It is quick to cook, with a protein content comparable to certain meats."

Soy chunks are sold in Indian markets as Nutri-Nuggets, Nutrella, Meal Maker and so on. Multiple Quora and non-Quora articles explain that Meal Maker (soy chunks) are 'defattened soy flour, a by-product of extracting soybean oil'. See this Quora article, this Quora article, this Quora article and this article in The Hindu.

Soy chunks are an example of TSP (Textured Soy Protein) or TVP (Textured Vegetable Protein), an industrially-manufactured product whose technique was discovered in 1960s. See Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP) (Wikipedia article). Soyfoods Association of North America has an article that lists various industrial soy products: Textured Soy Protein (TSP) is one of them.

TVP and TSP are not traditional soy recipes like tofu and tempeh. It's something produced by extracting a part of soybeans (the oil). So it's not whole (the emphasis in WFPB Diet is to consume food sources in their whole form). My interpretation of Dr McDougall's soy guidelines in this video (3 mins) is that we should stay away from soy chunks and soy nuggets; these are 'fake foods', a term used by Dr McDougall to refer to industrially-manufactured, non-traditional products.

Soy Burgers & Fake Meat

A good article why veggie burgers with fake meat are not exactly healthy: Veggie Burgers and Fake Meat: Pros and Cons (2019) by Ocean Robbins at FoodRevolution. In his articles and videos, Dr McDougall too discourages soy burgers and fake meat products.

Isolated Soy Protein

Wikipedia article on Soy Protein explains:

"Soy protein is a protein that is isolated from soybean. It is made from soybean meal that has been dehulled and defatted. Dehulled and defatted soybeans are processed into three kinds of high protein commercial products: soy flour, concentrates, and isolates. Soy protein isolate has been used since 1959 in foods for its functional properties."

Dr Fuhrman

Don't Fall for the Myths About Soy (2016) says that soybeans, edamame and traditional preparations like tofu and tempeh are health promoting. However, soy burgers and isolated soy proteins are discouraged. Excerpts:

"Is soy a good protein powder option? Does soy protein raise IGF-1?"

"Concentrated soy protein and isolated soy protein, found in many protein powders and vegetarian burgers, is not health food. These processed, fractionated and concentrated soy foods are missing much of the nutritional value from the original soybean. Supplementation with soy protein powder can increase insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) in the blood.[23-26]"

"IGF-1 is primarily elevated by animal protein, and this elevation is linked to an increased risk of cancer. ( Of all plant proteins, soy protein is the most similar to animal protein (most "complete") in amino acid content and distribution, which is why soy protein powder is more likely to increase IGF-1 than other plant proteins (such as hemp protein powder).[27] However, soy protein supplementation tends to increase IGF binding proteins along with IGF-1, and therefore may not have a significant effect on free IGF-1.25 This means soy protein powders likely have less potent effects on IGF-1 signaling than whey and other animal proteins."

Dr Klaper
(4 mins, 2020) Textured Vegetable Protein - Is Soy Protein (Vegan Meat) Healthy?

Dr Klaper says that TSP is a 'highly processed food', so it's okay as a "transition food" (such foods are adopted by those who are new to plant-based foods and seek the taste and texture of animal products; TSP / TVP tastes like meat - it's chewy and can be made to feel like ground meat in our mouth). Dr Klaper says that it's okay to consume TVP once a week or once a month as a 'treat'.

Dr McDougall

(2005) Soy — Food, Wonder Drug, or Poison? Excerpts:

"We recommend that you use traditional soy foods, like soy milk and tofu, only as a small part of your diet, at most 5% of your daily calories. 'Synthetic soy foods,' like meats, cheeses, and soy bars, should rarely, if ever, be consumed."

Examples of sensible uses might be:

* Soy milk to moisten cereal, not glassfuls as a beverage
* Tofu pieces in a "stir-fry" rice dish, not as a soy burger entree.
* An occasional tofu-based dessert, not daily soy "candy" bars

In Asian countries, soy is consumed as boiled soybeans (edamame), tofu (soybean curd), natto (fermented soybeans), miso (fermented soybean paste), okara (a by-product of tofu), soybean sprouts, soymilk, yuba (by-product of soy milk), kinako (soy flour), and soy sauce. These foods are made from simple processes like grinding, precipitation, and fermentation — thus, most of soy's ingredients remain little altered. Less than 5% of daily calories in the typical diet of Japanese or Chinese people comes from soybeans.1 This amounts to about 2 ounces (55 to 64 grams) derived from soy foods daily, which means only 7 to 8 grams of protein and 15 to 45 milligrams of the estrogen-like phytochemical known as isoflavone.

Isolated Protein Concentrates:

Concentrated dairy (cow-milk) protein, when consumed by people, causes large and important loses of calcium contributing to osteoporosis and kidney stones. You would hope that replacement with soy protein concentrates would eliminate this health hazard. Unfortunately, recent research on people has demonstrated that the addition of 40 grams of concentrated soy protein to a diet, already low in protein (40 to 50 grams daily) and high in calcium (1100 mg daily), causes significant net losses of calcium from the body.[27] Other research shows isolated soy protein is just as damaging as meat protein to the bones.[28]

Another recent study showed how 40 grams of soy or cow-milk protein concentrate added to the diet significantly increases levels of a powerful cancer-promoting growth hormone, called Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 — IGF-1.[29] However, soy protein was almost twice as powerful as the milk protein concentrate — doubling the levels of IGF-1 with 40 grams of soy protein isolate. This growth promoter has been strongly linked to the development of cancer of the breast, prostate, lung, and colon.[30] Excess IGF-1 stimulates cell proliferation and inhibits cell death — two activities you definitely don't want when cancer cells are involved.[30]

What does 40 grams of isolated soy protein mean to you? In real life, a person seeking excellent health by following a low-protein version of the McDougall diet with 1100 mg of calcium (which would have to be added with a calcium supplement) becomes at risk for osteoporosis, kidney stones, and cancer with the daily addition of a soy "candy bar" and a soy shake. One soy "chicken" patty for lunch and 2 soy burgers for dinner will also add that 40 grams of isolated protein daily — and so will just four soy breakfast patties. Now soy has real meaning in your life.

The effects of adding soy protein concentrates on people already consuming the bone-losing, high-animal-protein Western diet (100 to 160 grams of protein daily), or worse yet, the Atkins diet (up to 300 grams daily) have yet to be determined.31 Because of the very low incidence of osteoporosis, and breast and prostate cancer, among people who consume traditional soybean foods, there is every reason to believe that only the synthetic soy foods need to be of concern. (Studies have yet to be done to specifically test the effects of traditional foods in laboratory settings — in the meantime, we will keep these as a small part of our diet.)

(3 mins) The Truth About Soy

Dr McDougall says that we don't really need to eat soy. But if we do, then we should consume it in its traditional form as edamame, cooked soybeans, soybean sprouts, tofu, tempeh, miso -- preparations that go back thousands of years in Eastern cultures. He asks us to stay away from modern processed versions of soy like soy burgers, soy cheeses, soy nuggets, isolated soy protein, … he calls them 'fake foods'.

(11 mins) Soy Can Be Dangerous To Your Health | Dr McDougall

At offset 4:30 of this video, Dr McDougall explains how consumption of 40g of isolated soy protein (found in only 4 small-sized soy protein patties, something we could consume in a single breakfast) increases IGF-1 factor by twice as much (2x) as compared with 40 g of milk protein. In other words, Dr McDougall is suggesting that isolated soy protein is worse than milk. IGF-1 is associated with increased risk of cancer: IGF-1 as One-Stop Cancer Shop (3-min video by Dr Greger).

Dr Greger
(2021) Plant-Based Protein: Are Pea and Soy Protein Isolates Harmful? Dr Greger

(7 mins) Transcript. Dr Greger's summary: "What are the different impacts of plant protein versus animal protein, and do the benefits of plant proteins translate to plant protein isolates?"

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