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Satiating Capacity of Plant-Based Meat in Realistic Meal Contexts at Home. | LitMetric

Satiating Capacity of Plant-Based Meat in Realistic Meal Contexts at Home.

Foods

Wageningen Food and Biobased Research, Wageningen University and Research, Bornse Weilanden 9, 6708 WG Wageningen, The Netherlands.

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores the potential of plant-based meat substitutes to help create more sustainable diets, highlighting the need for consumer acceptance tied to feelings of fullness or satiety.
  • - Sixty adults participated in the study, consuming fixed ready-to-eat meals featuring either animal or plant-based 'meat' options in real-life home settings.
  • - Results showed no significant difference in the satiating capacity of plant-based and animal meat dishes, suggesting that plant-based meals can effectively satisfy hunger just like traditional meat meals.

Article Abstract

Plant-based meat substitutes replacing animal meat can potentially support the transition towards more sustainable diets. To enable the required transition, consumer acceptance of plant-based meat is essential. An important aspect of this is the feeling of satiety or being full after eating. This study determined the satiating capacity of both plant-based meat and animal meat in 60 adults under real-life in-home conditions. Participants consumed four fixed ready-to eat meals for lunch at home once per week. Two types of Indian curry with 'chicken' were investigated as well as two types of pasta Bolognese with 'minced meat'. The two 'chicken' dishes and the two 'minced meat' dishes had the same recipe except for a gram-for-gram swap (125 g each) of either animal meat (chicken breast and minced meat) or plant-based (soy) meat. Results showed no difference in the satiating power of an animal meat dish and a plant-based meat dish when these were eaten as part of a full lunch meal at home. In addition, the meals did not result in energy nor macronutrient compensation during the rest of the day after consuming the meals. This occurred despite the caloric differences of the meals as a result of the real-life conditions (i.e., a lower energy content of the pasta with plant-based meat compared to the other meals). We conclude that meals with plant-based meat can be as satiating as meals with animal meat.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10706327PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12234280DOI Listing

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