ZOE Science & Nutrition - No.1 Protein Scientist: Are you eating enough? | Prof. Stuart Phillips & Dr. Federica Amati
Episode Date: July 31, 2025Are you eating enough protein? This is probably a question you’ve asked yourself. With “high protein” labels on almost every type of food product you can imagine, it’s easy to get confused. I...n this episode, Prof. Stuart Phillips explains how protein can keep us healthy as we age. He also outlines when we should eat protein, how much protein we really need, and provides simple, practical advice to help you achieve it. Stuart is a professor in the Kinesiology Department at McMaster University. He’s the author of more than 400 scientific papers, many focusing on protein and muscle health, particularly during ageing. With so much confusion around this topic - especially in the context of fitness and ageing - this episode will provide clear, evidence-based answers from one of the world’s leading scientists on the topic, to help you make smarter nutrition choices. 🥑 Make smarter food choices. Become a member at zoe.com - 10% off with code PODCAST 🌱 Try our new plant based wholefood supplement - Daily 30+ *Naturally high in copper which contributes to normal energy yielding metabolism and the normal function of the immune system Follow ZOE on Instagram. Timecodes 00:00 We’ve been lied to about protein 04:05 Why protein is completely different from carbs and fat 09:05 The depressing age when you start losing muscle 14:45 Your muscles have a secret second job 17:25 Why food companies are suddenly adding protein to everything 22:25 The shocking protein intake that fuelled your biggest ever growth spurt 26:45 Why the 'optimal' amount of protein is so hard to define 33:05 The surprising truth about protein for building muscle 40:15 Most of us are already eating the 'optimal' amount of protein without trying 42:30 When eating more protein could actually be harmful 45:00 The ‘anabolic window’ myth debunked 48:50 Why 'animal protein is superior' is an outdated idea 51:16 The myth of ‘incomplete’ plant proteins 51:55 The ancient food secret our ancestors discovered all over the world 53:50 Is there an upper limit for protein in one meal? 57:25 My number one food for a high-protein breakfast 59:05 A simple pyramid for choosing the healthiest protein sources 59:55 The 'healthy' protein source that’s a class one carcinogen 01:02:55 When a protein bar is no healthier than a chocolate bar 01:04:30 Why your protein cookie could be reducing your healthy life years 01:06:20 My number one tip for health (and it’s not about nutrition) 01:08:50 The ideal daily protein target for most healthy adults Studies: Optimizing adult protein intake during catabolic health conditions, 2020, Advances in Nutrition Integrated myofibrillar protein synthesis in recovery from resistance exercise with and without multi-ingredient supplementation in overweight older men, 2019, Frontiers in Nutrition Higher dietary protein during weight loss: muscle sparing?, 2018, Obesity What is the optimal amount of protein to support post-exercise skeletal muscle reconditioning in the older adult?, 2016, Sports Medicine 📚Books by our ZOE Scientists The Food For Life Cookbook Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Free resources from ZOE Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.
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Welcome to Zoe, Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
Are you confused about protein? I know I am. Am I getting enough? How often should I eat it? Is high-protein ice cream a good idea?
If you've heard answers to some of these questions, whether on social media or from your workout-loving friend,
there's a good chance these originated from research carried out by today's guest.
Professor Stuart Phillips
Stuart is the world's leading expert on protein, with hundreds of peer-reviewed papers to his name.
Have you heard that you need to eat protein straight after you work out?
Stuart wrote that paper.
Have you heard that there's a limit to how much protein you can absorb?
in a single meal. Stuart wrote that paper. Have you heard that animal protein is better than
plant protein? Stuart wrote that paper too. But here's the thing. Science progresses, and
Stuart has been carrying on research for 30 years now. As his research has continued, he's changed
his mind on a lot of it, but the world has been slow to catch up, and now he's decided to speak out.
We're also joined by Dr. Federica Amati, head nutritionist here at Zoe,
scientists at Imperial College London, and the brains behind Zoe's new personalised guidance on protein intake.
By the end of this episode, you'll know once and for all how much protein you need each day,
along with answers to the most contentious questions about protein from the world's leading expert on the topic.
Stuart, thank you for joining me today.
It's a pleasure, Jonathan.
And thanks for having me.
And Federica, thanks for being here.
I'm so excited about today, Jonathan.
Can't wait.
I think we're all excited about this one.
First, we have to get through our traditional round of quickfire questions.
And, Stuart, I've heard that you have listened to this podcast, so you know what's coming.
Sure.
We've designed this to be really difficult for scientists.
You're ready to give it a go?
Yeah, go for it.
Brilliant.
Stuart, is the protein that we consume mostly use for our muscles?
No.
Federica, are most of us deficient in protein?
Not most of us, but some groups are at risk.
Stuart, can protein help keep you healthy as you age?
Yes.
Federica, could some people benefit from protein supplements?
Yes, but quality is important.
And back to Stuart.
Does it matter when you eat protein?
Maybe.
And finally, Stuart, you've been researching protein for
decades. Is there anything that you've changed your mind on as new data has emerged?
There's lots of things I've changed my mind on, but I think the big one is that plant
derived or plant-based protein is not inferior to animal-based protein in terms of supporting
health and definitely muscles. I think all of those quick-fire answers are super interesting,
and that's partly because I know that we get an enormous number of questions about protein
from our listeners, and I think that's partly because there's enormous amount of conflicting advice
online.
But it's also partly because big food companies have started to plaster their products with labels
saying high in protein.
And as a result, lots of people are saying, well, so I guess I'm deficient in protein,
am I getting enough?
So I'm incredibly excited to have both of you on here to hopefully clear up a lot of
questions.
Stuart, you are one of the world's leading researchers on protein with 100.
hundreds of peer-reviewed papers on the subject.
And Federica, you've been leading Zoe's own position on protein,
which I know incorporates a lot of Stewart's research
in order to provide personalized protein guidance to Zoe members.
So I can't think of two better people
to hopefully clear up some of this confusion.
But before we talk about exactly how much,
Stuart, could you actually help to explain why protein matters at all?
The clear distinction I like to make is that for a good,
carbohydrates and fats, they're fuel, for the most part. There's a small requirement for fat to be
a structural element of cells in our body, but protein is the structural component of everything.
It's skin, it's bones, it's your heart, it's your lungs, and clearly it's your muscle, but it's
part of your brain too. So it's a substrate. It can also be burned as fuel, although not very
much. So that's, I think, the key part that distinguishes it from the other two macronutrients.
can you help us to understand a little bit more why do I need to get it in food what happens when
I eat it where does it go yeah sure so protein is made up of building blocks and we call these
building blocks amino acids and the amino part comes from the fact that protein contains nitrogen
it's the essential nuclei that differentiates it from carbohydrates and fats which are basically
carbons hydrogens and oxygens there are 20 different amino acids and we require we need to
get them from our diet, nine of them. And of those nine essential, we call them amino acids,
there are groups that have various functions, but we can produce the rest. So the need for protein
is really the need for those essential amino acids, which are degraded and excreted in urine,
hair, nails, your feces. So our requirement for protein is really about replacing essential amino
acids that are lost.
Yeah, and I love to think of amino acids essentially as building blocks, as he said. And it's amazing when you see the way the amino acids then connect and fold makes proteins. And those then, as Stewart said, go to form skin hairnails. Also, it's an essential part of your immune system. Your immune system relies on protein to create immunoglobulins to get ready for inflammation or to get rid of an infection. So a really important thing. And this relationship between essential and non-essential amino acids is also important because our
can use essential amino acids, like taking Lego bricks apart and then build up the non-essential
ones. So if you're getting enough variety of amino acids in your diet, apart from the essential
ones which you have to get through food, your liver is able to build the others and then make
any protein need from that, which is really cool. Like the liver is super smart. It's a very clever
organ. I'm just thinking about all the parties at your house as you're watching YouTube
and proteins folding. Don't know whether I'm going to quite be able to convince my family that
that Saturday Night Entertainment. Probably Stuart at your house, this is Saturday Night Entertainment.
It used to be when my boys were young enough to appreciate Lego blocks, etc. But not so much
anymore. Brilliant. So there are like 20 of these different amino acids. These are sort of the
Lego bricks that I used to build up the proteins for everything inside me. And as a human being,
I can't make all of those from scratch. So nine of those Lego bricks I need to take in. But the other
11, I can like make myself. Yep. Now when I think of protein,
I was thinking about this last night.
I immediately think of my 17-year-old son.
And he's like, well, I need to eat steak so I can put on more muscle at the gym.
That is the link for him.
It's totally clear.
And everything that he's seen on like, his, you know, social media channels are all about, you know, as a 17-year-old boy, how you put on more muscle.
And it's very exciting for him as well.
Because the truth is that, like, I go to the gym and I try really hard not to lose muscle.
He goes to the gym.
And the next day, it's just like there.
It's totally unfair.
I'm sure there'll be some listeners who can understand that.
But I know that in your research, you're not just focused on sort of young people, people looking to weight lift or look beautiful.
But actually, you've done a lot of research on protein in older adults.
Could you help to explain why protein is important for health and quality of life as we age, not just like if I want to put more muscles on?
Yeah, I mean, I think it would be fair to say over the 28 years that I've been at McMaster University, I started out and we just looked at young people. We were interested in making their muscles bigger. So much like your son or university age students. And we learned a lot about what we can do in terms of protein. But the key stimulus for growing muscle, if you're younger or if you're older about preventing the loss and I'm squarely in that category as well, is to lift weights. So resistance.
exercise or loading is the most important part. When you're a kid and you're growing, you're
under the influence of lots of growth factors, which, you know, linear height and then broadened
chest and all these things which your son is experiencing and the fact that he's lifting in the
gym, two thumbs up. When you're older, of course, that growth stimulus is gone and at a certain
point, and it's probably depressing to mention this. It's probably for most people, it's in their
30s. They begin to slowly lose muscle. And this age-related.
loss of muscle is a condition if it's problematic that we call sarcopenia.
So time marches on.
Research becomes me search because I'm interested in what's happening to me.
And I also direct a center where we have 500 community members coming in, essentially,
to exercise, and the average age of them is about 72.
So, you know, I'm talking to these folks, why you're here, why are you exercising?
Well, I've heard it's important, et cetera, and the story goes on.
And so, yeah, lots of important benefits associated with hanging on to muscle, but for the protein standpoint, supporting that lack of muscle loss and supporting all of the other physiological processes that Federica mentioned about protein requiring processes that are important in older people too.
Yeah, it's so important in older age to have functional ability and to be functionally able, you have to be able to get up of your chair, get out of bed by yourself.
And muscular skeletal mass is essential.
So how healthy your bones and your muscles are, and especially the muscles that help the skeleton get up.
So not so much they're like good-looking muscles, but the functional muscles, they're the ones that we want to maintain.
Because as we get older, that's where you really see the difference between being able to live independently and having to need help to do your sort of normal daily routine.
So I think this is where a lot of the interests come from in how do we maintain this functional ability in older adults.
And muscular skeletal mass is super important for that.
And so is protein and muscles only about continuing to have strong enough muscles to sort of
be able to get out of your chair or to be able to get out of bed or like to not fall over
or does it play any other role? I'm asking a bit Federator because you talked about, for example,
like your immune system and. Yeah. As Stuart mentioned, we can't store protein. So whereas with
energy, we store it in our muscle tissue. We also store it in our liver. We store it as fat in our
fat cells. So we have lots of lovely energy stores to tap into when we need them. But if you don't
have enough protein in your diet, then essentially we can't really get it from anywhere apart from
breaking down our muscles to get that protein. And we do that because the immune system needs
protein, because other functions, enzymes which catalyze all of the reactions in your body are
proteins. So what happens is your body then starts to draw protein from your muscles to help
with the other processes.
You see this a lot, Jonathan, like thinking about the life course in low-income countries
where there isn't access to food, the biggest killer for children under five is protein malnutrition
because our bodies cannot cope without enough protein, right?
And so when we think about why we need to be aware of the importance of protein,
it's because it's involved in so many processes.
Because of that, our body is amazing at absorbing it from food, by the way.
like we're super efficient at absorbing protein from either small intestine and like making the most of
everything we eat. But yeah, it's essentially a really important part of health generally.
If I'm not immediately getting it from food, I'm going to sort of strip it out of my muscles
in order to carry out all of these critical things like fight my cold or whatever it is.
And so if I'm not getting that protein, then basically I'm going to strip down those muscles.
And so this is one of the reasons that I might lose.
muscle over time if I'm not supporting it? Yes, and you see examples of this in two big groups.
So one is people who have rapid weight loss. So like GLP1 receptor agonis, if we don't support
people that take these drugs with exercise and correct nutrition, their body will use muscle
to get protein. And then the other big group is cancer patients. So patients who are undergoing
chemotherapy, cancer is a very metabolically active disease. And so it will get protein to support the
immune system from your muscles. And this is called cancer cakexia, so this loss of muscle
mass and cancer patients. It's like a really, it's a big problem, actually. It's a big predictor
of survival for patients. It's like muscle is a labile reserve of amino acids and protein.
And despite what people think about its importance, as Federica mentioned, it is the tissue that
essentially will give up its amino acids for more critical processes. There's a concept in aging and
this concept of muscle loss and sarcopenia that muscle is sort of like a functional reserve.
So in times of being challenged, whether you're sick or during COVID was a great example
when older people were hospitalized. And, you know, it was a real struggle to survive. And as
Federica mentioned, skeletal muscle in those times is a particularly important organ. And
almost the more you have of it going in there, the better your odds are survival are.
It's funny.
I'm completely reimagining this in a way I hadn't understood before because I think everybody
listening probably is very familiar with the idea that the fat on their body is a store of
energy.
We all know that if you haven't eaten any food, then you know that, in fact, that's where
you're getting supported.
And we know that human beings can live for a long time, right, without food as long as
they're getting water.
But we know that you lose fat and weight.
I had never understood before that I could think about my muscles not only as mechanisms
to move around with, but also.
So you're sort of saying it's the only place I can store this protein from one day to the next?
Yeah, I mean, I think that that's the odd part about protein that people maybe fail to recognize
is that, you know, we're very good at storing fat almost an endless capacity.
Too good.
Unfortunately, we have limited capacity to store carbohydrate, but our liver and our muscles are two great sites where we do store carbohydrate.
But there's nowhere to put protein and sort of stock it away and use it at a later time.
So you either ingest it and use it, or you pull the nitrogen off, you make urea, ammonia,
you excrete that mostly in the urine, and then the rest of the carbon skeleton that's left over,
you burn it as fuel, or sometimes you can make it into glucose.
I like to say, you know, if you're stuck on a desert island and you had no protein,
you wouldn't last long, but, you know, we can live with a minimal amount of carbohydrate
and fat, as long as we have some protein, we won't be super happy, but we'll survive.
Can I just ask for a second about that conversion of protein question because that came up a lot as well because we're now surrounded by products that say added protein and they're often on very highly processed food and the argument basically is like, well, there used to be fats and sugars in this, but now I've got protein and so this is presented as it's all the win.
But I think I just heard you say that if I eat more protein than I need, it can end up getting burnt and used as calories.
Could you just explain that for a second?
You know, the 70s and 80s were characterized by fat was bad, carbs were good, and so we took
fats out of a lot of foods, and we created very carb heavy in a lot of situations replaced
it with sugar.
It was a true disservice to, you know, the food supply system.
Then it was almost like it sort of swung back and all of a sudden fat was okay and even saturated
fat was okay.
And so, you know, the keto diet reemerged and almost like a phoenix.
And now there's been a bit of a push, and I'm sure we'll talk about it, about the recommended
dietary allowance in North America, the recommended nutrient intake in the UK, lots of different
recommendations that are probably too low, in my opinion, on a few others.
And so the pendulum becomes, well, we need to get protein because we're not getting enough.
But that's not the message.
It's actually, you know, a lot of people are getting more than enough.
but maybe there are more people than we thought who aren't quite making it.
So now the pendulum swung the other way.
And as you point out, Jonathan, I think that we've overcooked the message a little bit.
And we've got products that, you know, protein water is the greatest example of, you know.
I like protein ice cream.
Yeah, protein ice cream.
Three thirds of a tub for 10 grams of protein.
It's awesome.
Yeah.
Well, it's a pretty good ice cream to protein ratio.
But yeah, it's odd to see protein appearing in places where.
where I don't think it has any business belonging because nobody's truly and in our society's
deficient in protein.
There may be a few people who are just a little bit under what I think is the recommended intake,
but I certainly don't think that, you know, it needs to be put into a lot of the foods where
it's appearing.
Thank you, Stuart.
And if I come back to this question about like what happens if I'm taking more protein
than I'm going to use right now, because I had assumed that basically,
if I didn't need it, it was just coming straight back out the other side at no cost.
But I think I just heard you say something else.
Yeah.
So I think that there are some nuances in here.
So the key point is that the nitrogen is pulled off of the protein structure.
And we make urea for the most part and ammonia.
And that's excreted for the most part in our urine.
So people say, oh, you pee protein out.
It's not really that you pee the protein out.
You pee the nitrogen out.
But once you've taken the nitrogen off of the amino acid, it ceases to be an amino acid
and you either burn it, it's oxidized, so it yields energy, or you can, in occasions, you can turn it into glucose.
I think that it's true, however, to say that the efficiency that we do that with is not particularly good.
So as opposed to carbohydrates and fats, which we are very efficient at burning, we're not quite as good.
at burning amino acids. So it's not that it's completely inert. You don't use it. You can,
but maybe not with the same efficiency as carbohydrates and fats. And I think that means it's not
zero calorie though from the perspective. I just want to make sure this is clear.
Protein is four calories per gram, kilocalories per gram, just like carbohydrates are
with plus or minus a little bit. So yeah, of course it's energy. And, you know, when we look at
everybody's dietary intake. It's not like protein. We sum it all up and we just put a big zero on
the bottom. For every gram, it's four kilocalories worth of energy as well. I think you're saying
that seems totally obvious. And I was completely shocked because I think the way that it's presented
is more like a vitamin. It doesn't count. You can get more of this thing you really need
as opposed to, by the way, if you're not going to use it up because you're not doing enough
exercise today, then your body, as usual, is going to figure out very efficiently how to burn it,
and therefore your total calories in the day is up. And ultimately, you know, if you're, like many of us,
like just fighting not to put on weight, it's not going to be your friend, is it? I think that
there's a little bit of a nuance to that message. We're not quite as good at burning protein as
we are at burning carbohydrates and fats, but it's certainly not a free pass. In other words,
if you over-consume protein, you are over-consuming energy.
The hard part is to figure out, do you actually gain fat?
And I know you've had Christopher Gardner on here.
He's a good friend and a colleague,
but I kind of surprised Christopher with a paper showing
that if people consume more protein,
they tend to gain a little bit of muscle, not a lot,
and they don't gain as much fat as you might think.
They still will put on weight, but not as much as you might think.
And I think that that's the sort of,
oh, you can eat as much protein as you might think.
you want, it's totally, it's not a problem. And the answer is, like the answer to most
interesting question is, it depends. What I'm understanding now is protein is definitely more
than just like building my son's big muscles, that we need it in order to live and function
for like every part of our body. And it's also really important, you know, in order to live
these long and healthy lives. I think this then brings us on to that key question that all of our
listeners had like how much. And I think you've already mentioned, right, there's a lot of debate
on this topic. Now, Stuart, you know, you've published hundreds of papers around protein. So I'd
love to get your view and you can maybe explain how that's contrasted with what you described
about sort of historical recommended daily amounts. Maybe just starting with sort of healthy
adults, what are your recommendations for protein intake? Sure. I think the beginning point for
this is to talk about what we call in North America, it's the recommended dietary allowance or the
IDA and the UK recommended nutrient intake. It's usually about 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of
body weight. And everybody wants to know, you know, is that ideal body weight? It's just per
kilogram of body weight. From my perspective, I think that's a little bit too low. I think it should
be closer to about one, maybe as high as 1.2 for older people. But I do think that the benefits of
protein probably stop a lot sooner than a lot of people are making out. You know, when you were first
born as an infant, in the first year of life, you doubled your body weight. And what do you think
your protein intake was to support that? I'm assuming enormous amounts of protein at this point.
But remember, you're very small, right? So grams per kilo, it's actually sort of about 1.2, 1.5,
something like that. So at the time of your life that you experienced, the biggest and best growth
you ever had, you did it with a pretty low protein intake.
Is that breast milk that you're describing to us?
Yeah, yeah. Nature, nature's got it right.
Yeah.
That's a fascinating way to start with it.
Some of our listeners won't realize, but this is a really charged debate.
So if you're really into nutrition science and you talk to a lot of people, this is one of
those areas where people get really worked up about this number.
I feel that there will be a set of people listening to this and saying, oh, but
those numbers, they're clearly too low. And I think about like my first experience going to the
gym and my trainer, I was in my 30s already. I'd never lifted anything. He was like, okay,
well, one of the critical things you now need to do is eat two grams per kilogram in order to
get any benefit. Why is there this debate and where does this come from? And why are you so
confident, and maybe also why, on the other hand, you feel that 0.8 number was too low.
Maybe just give us a bit more of this, because I think that will help us all to feel confident
in the answer.
Sure.
It is charged.
I think that there's a lot of people who, myself included, have invested a lot of time into doing
investigations and sort of looking for the answer to this.
I think, you know, starting out with the recommended dietary allowance, recommended nutrient
intake.
So it's established with a method called nitrogen balance.
And it's essentially exactly as it sounds, the balance of nitrogen, which is that we've, you know, already decided the essential thing that makes protein, protein, or amino acids, amino acids.
And it's how much you take in all your food and all your drink and how much you excrete.
And so I do think, and I could be wrong here, that I may be one of the few people who's still active in doing protein, who's actually done a wonderful nitrogen balance experiment.
And we collected everything.
We collected urine, we collected feces, we did sweat washdowns on people after they had exercised.
It's so much fun.
They're delightful studies to conduct.
And the balance of nitrogen should be, if your protein in and out, should be zero.
The problem with nitrogen balance is that from a physiological standpoint, there is nothing that I can say about your physiology when you're in nitrogen balance.
and there is this issue of if we give people more and more and more protein that the balance of
nitrogen gets increasingly positive, which should mean that you're retaining more and more
nitrogen.
We've already said we don't do that, so we can't really explain why that happens.
We've got some ideas, but those two, I'll just call them observations to me, really indicate
that the methodology is not particularly.
good. So, you know, fast forward to 2025, we've got some methodologies now that I think are
better. The problem is, in science, is coming to some degree of agreement about how good those
methodologies are. And I'll be honest about that. So not everybody agrees. But we do have
some observational studies looking at people's protein intakes. And if they are a little bit higher
than the RDA as people get older, they tend to have better muscle mass, they tend to have better
mobility, they tend to be a little bit stronger, and they maybe have a small survival advantage.
But is it so high that the protein intakes that are twice the RDA are better?
I don't think that's the case.
So the RDA, I think, is too low.
Higher than the RDA is better, but how much higher?
That's really difficult to determine.
And I think it's the difference between what do you require, i.e. need, and what is optimal? What is better?
And, you know, nutritionally, to give you another example, I'll say it the British way, vitamin C, not vitamin
over here, but vitamin C was recognized for a long time for its ability to obviously prevent you from getting scurvy.
And, you know, who wants to get scurvy, right? No thanks. But the recognition was that consuming more
vitamin C over and above what you needed to prevent scurvy was good and that was added to
the intake to say this is good you get better immune function smokers need more but that extension
hasn't happened for protein and there's probably lots of reasons for that not the least of which
would be the disagreement about how we replace nitrogen balance as a method to determine protein
requirements. That's super interesting. I think what's also important is that our ability to
maintain nitrogen balance changes over our life course. And when we're challenged with lower
protein intake, our bodies become more efficient at maintaining the nitrogen balance. Because
protein is so important, our metabolism adapts to make sure we get what we need. And so actually
there is also evidence to show that we get a few of decrease protein availability in the diet.
if you're under the age of 65, you still have this metabolic flexibility to maintain nitrogen
balance with lower protein intake. You've used this word nitrogen balance both of you a couple of
times, and I haven't followed the link between that and the amount of protein. Can you just unpack
that? Well, so in simple terms, it's protein in minus protein out. So if protein in is greater
than protein out, it means that you're retaining protein. So we can forget about nitrogen and just
call it protein if you want. If protein and protein out are balanced, we're good. Like we're eating
the right amount and we're excreting the same amount, all good. The negative situation, protein
out is exceeding protein in. We're losing protein from some pool. Chances are we're losing it
from muscle, I think as Federica has already said, cancer, weight loss, GLP1-induced weight loss,
for example. And I think in those situations, you have to realize is that muscle is lost,
but then maybe some other processes and leaning on a term called adaptation are being sort of downregulated
and we're able to then come back into nitrogen balance because we have this amazing adaptive capacity
to withstand if you like lower protein intakes probably again realizing the essential nature
of protein for normal physiological function so if i'm in protein balance which was your nitrogen
balance. Does that mean I am getting all the protein that I need? That's correct. In situations where
maybe I am getting less protein, my body might make adjustments so that actually it can now cope with
this lower level of protein. I'm in balance. So you're saying both of you, actually I've not
really got a problem. It's like I've sort of become more efficient somehow at using this.
For some time, right? But then if you prolong that and you don't have enough protein for too long,
then do you start to run into troubles where you don't get enough protein?
But your body tries really hard to maintain balance for as long as it can.
Some of the studies I've seen is like about six weeks.
Is that about right?
Yeah, I mean, we reestablish when we're in negative protein balance,
we reestablish zero protein balance pretty quickly.
And so what that means to come back to the Lego building block analogy
is that the processes that are using those building blocks have kind of slowed down.
And you probably have a period of time where you're flexible and you can withstand that.
It's not a big deal.
But if your protein intake goes too low for too long, then that's when these adaptive processes become, if you like, an issue and you begin to tap into proteins that are in your muscle and maybe immune function gets a little bit lower.
But, you know, I think that it's probably fair to say that the RDA is pretty good.
call it a baseline estimate. And I'm not suggesting that it's two, three, four times the RDA,
which I think a lot of people are out there saying this is where you need to aim. But it's
at least, I think, about 20 to 50 percent higher than what most people recommend. I'd love to
talk about different groups now. Maybe firstly, are there particular groups that are at more
risk of not getting enough protein and where these numbers of sort of you were saying 1.2,
is too low?
Yeah, so as we mentioned earlier is children.
So children have a high protein requirement.
So where there is no access to food, children at real risk of protein malnutrition.
I will say again, this is really only really seen in low-income countries.
So children in the UK and the US, luckily have access to food to get enough protein.
And then later in life, it's after the age of 65, you start to see that there is this increased
requirement for protein intake.
And it's a combination of, as Stuart said, like sarcopenia, so muscle mass loss, reduction in appetite.
Also, we become a little bit less efficient at absorbing it, a little bit less efficient at like getting it into the tissues needs to go into.
So the whole picture then means that actually increasing that recommendation in these groups is important.
And then within older people, those who have chronic illness, so people who have a higher requirement for their immune function, if they have higher inflammation levels, that also requires.
additional protein. And we've touched on cancer patients, which is actually a group where not enough
protein can actually be the difference between life and death quite a lot of the time. Yeah.
Those groups, I think have I missed anyone? No, I think that's a pretty good summary. You know,
to come back to Jonathan's 17-year-old son, the belief there would be, of course, because you're
gaining so much muscle is that somehow protein is going to, you know, be the limiting step for that.
You know, we've done a lot of work in this area, and I can say with pretty good confidence
that the big driver, and by big, like, capital B-I-G, is lifting weights.
Like, protein never really limits your muscle gains unless you're preparing for bodybuilding
competition.
So they're desperately trying to lose weight, but they're trying to hang on to their muscle.
And, you know, that's a scenario.
But it's not the scenario that most people are in.
And so let's just say weightlifting is the big thing as opposed to the protein.
I was just describing the scenario when I first went to the gym and my trainer says, you know, you need to eat two grams per kilogram.
And it's not like he just made that up off the internet.
So this is like very strongly embedded in a lot of physical trainers.
So I'd love to discuss a bit more.
When does this cutoff come to?
So what is the number that you are saying if I'm going to the gym?
And is that like if I'm going to the gym?
times a week? What about if I'm going every day? Like, what is the number that actually you should
be hitting? Yeah. So to be really, really clear about this, going to the gym and lifting weights
if you're trying to gain muscle or if you're older and trying to prevent the loss of muscle
is the categorically the primary stimulus that's going to result in muscle growth or retention
of muscle as you age. Protein helps, but the analogy I like to use,
use is that lifting weights bakes the cake and protein is that thin layer of icing as delicious
as it is across the top of the cake. Or maybe it's even the sprinkles on the icing, I'm not
sure. So it's a small dressing on top of that. If you're, you know, one of these hardcore folks
and you're doing CrossFit and you're hitting the gym three and four times, maybe you do have
an increased requirement for protein. There's a lot of wear and tear that goes on in your body that
you probably need to replace some of those damaged proteins.
And I think it could be as high as about 1.6 grams per kilo.
So that's twice the RDA.
And I know a lot of people will say, wow, that sounds like a lot,
but recognize that it's much below the 2 grams per kilogram or traditionally the 2.2 grams per kilogram,
which the bodybuilders would say is the almost folklore-ish level of 1 gram per pound.
And when we talk about overcook concepts, then you ask me about things I changed my mind on.
And this is one.
We performed two what are called meta-analys, where we looked at a lot of the literature.
And I remember one student of mine, he came back and he showed me, and I'm like, that's not much at all, like for the extra muscle.
And it really was one of the, I don't know, it was an epiphany moment, but it was this gradual realization that a lot of what I'd been cracking the whip on, I'm like,
I don't think that's actually right.
And now, you know, it takes time to undo learnings, my own included.
I've tried to get the message out that it's probably overdid it.
But now the, you know, the horses out of the stable now.
And so things have sort of gone radically off in terms of recommendations and intakes.
And I think without any good science that backs it up.
Are you saying by far the most important thing is like how,
hard I'm working in the gym. Absolutely. For determining my ability to put on these muscles. And as long
as I'm not sort of really, really deficient in protein, actually it doesn't make a very big
difference. You know, if I was eating one gram per kilogram, I'm probably still going to get a lot of
the muscle gain from the gym. You may get all of it at one gram. It might take you a little longer,
But I'm actually, you know, the thought experiment is how much difference that number makes.
And I'm, you know, I'm sheepishly saying it maybe not as big a deal as we once thought.
And you're saying it sheepishly because if I'd interviewed you 20 years ago,
you would have said, what would you have said 20 years ago?
The younger, maybe better looking version of me, less wrinkle definitely would have said,
no, no, Jonathan, you need to get, you know, this intake and it would have been at the higher end.
I'm less and less convinced that's the case.
and more with the aging population where they're retaining muscle and, you know, everybody's sort of, you know, aging wins, and it's the question of whether you age like this with muscle or you age like this. And you only require a little bit of protein to make that happen. But once you begin to lift weights, it's like, it's the magic that makes you really hang on to muscle or if you're a young person to gain muscle. So if you're not going to the gym, there's like no magic to like eating muscle.
more protein than most people have. You're not going to get any benefit. If you are going to the
gym regularly, so I think you were saying three, four, five times a week. Well, the recommendations are
two sessions of resistive exercise. Your 150 minutes is, that's the WHO. It doesn't matter where you
are in the world. That's universal. So, you know, you've got to do both. I'm more of a lifter than I am
a walker or a runner, but you definitely have to get both to get all the health benefits.
And if you want to get like the optimal return out of that effort, and I have to say,
as someone, I don't love going to the gym.
So I do feel like I'm definitely doing it for the benefits.
You're sort of want to get.
You're immortal.
You're doing your state.
I'm doing that.
Then you're saying getting up to 1.6 grams per kilogram, if you're really working out that much,
we'll get my optimal benefits on muscle.
But actually what I'm hearing is like if I was down at 1 or 1.2, it might be a very small
difference. And so I shouldn't obsess about this versus other things. I don't want to put words in your
mouth. I'm just trying to make sure I've understood. I think that's a pretty good summary. I mean,
the other analogy I've used is, you know, you dip a cloth in water. And every time you turn it,
the water that comes out is a benefit. So this is you going to the gym, the first sort of three,
you know, lots of benefits. And the last little part here is that's where the protein comes in. And you've got to
twist it pretty hard and you get a few drops out. And that's the protein layer on top of all
of this. Can I ask one last question on this? Yeah. Which is your own diet. So you do still go to,
you do still go to the gym. I can tell that you work out for people on audio. You know,
Stuart is in much better shape than you might pick up from his self-deprecating comments.
Yeah. How many grams a kilogram do you go for? I'm probably around 1.3 to 1.4 on most days.
I definitely don't focus on protein. I do have a protein heavier meal, which like a lot of people is probably, you know, your dinner time or suppertime meal, your last meal of the day, give it the global definition. I think about it, but I certainly don't, you know, weigh things or or obsess about it. I'm definitely a very mediocre athlete slash whatever, and I'm a mere mortal these days. I'm not training for anything other than to age well.
And we haven't talked about one important thing is that the majority of adults get around 1.2 to 1.4 grams a day without trying.
Like our diets have protein in them.
But at the end of the day, most of us who are eating enough food, and I have to stress that.
So if you're getting enough food, you're getting about 1.2 to 1.4 grams a day.
Like that's the average for US and UK.
This actually came up, I think, in one of my podcasts with someone said to me, you know, when you do exercise, do you?
find you're hungrier? And I was like, oh, I do. And they're like, what happens when you're
hungrier? And they're like, do you eat more food? And I was like, yes. And I assume out of this,
just as a consequence of what you're talking about, that I'm going to eat more total amount
of protein as part as this. Yeah. You're nodding. This is where Christopher Gardner and I,
good friend, we agree to disagree on a few things. But he makes a great point. And it's a good one
to sort of maybe keep in mind, you know, he's at Stanford University, so big U.S.
University and in North American football players.
So they eat a lot of food.
I mean, these guys, they're big men.
They're eating at, you know, three, four thousand calories.
And even if you ate, you know, 10% of your energy intake at that sort of caloric intake
as protein and as big as these guys are, they're hitting, you know, 1.7, 1.8 grams per kilo,
like without even trying.
But Christopher's Fond is saying is that, you know, there's a lot of protein supplements and everything.
So then they are into the 2.3, 2.4 grams per kilo range, none of which I think is useful or doing anything for them,
but other than reinforcing the belief that that's what they need.
But it's almost without trying that it happens for, you know, very active people, particularly those that are, you know,
trying to sort of bulk, if you like.
Also, I do think, to your point, a lot of people face.
they're in this group. A lot of people think they're pro athletes or that their requirements
are super high. And it's really a very small percentage of the human population that has these
specific requirements for very hard to obtain goals. Earlier you said Jonathan, if someone's not
active, if they increase their protein, will that do any good? Not only will it not do any good,
right, because it's not going to grow muscles for them if they don't move. It could actually be
doing harm, especially in midlife. So what is quite consistent in the literature is that if people
between the age of 50 and 65, get more than 20% of the caloric intake from protein,
they're actually at higher risk of chronic diseases, especially cancer. So if you're essentially
not active at all and you're in that midlife zone, increasing your protein intake with supplements
or just because you decided that stakes are the best food in the world, like you could actually
be doing way more harm than good. If you were confused about protein before you started this episode,
you can be sure that your friends and family are in the same boat.
So why not share this episode with them now?
Then they can finally understand their own protein requirements to support their health as they age.
I would like to move shortly into like how do I turn all of this into practice for real around lunch.
Before I do that, there are also lots of questions around sort of the timing and spread of protein.
And I think that's also again encouraged by all of these big food manufacturers sort of suggesting that I need to have protein in.
everything now. And thinking back also to my first experience of going to the gym, I realized also,
as well as the two grams per kilogram, the other thing that you said is you absolutely need to eat
protein. I mean, I'm slightly making this up, but I feel like within 10 minutes of leaving the
gym, because otherwise all of that hard work would be completely wasted. I'm cringing because that
was probably me telling you that at some point. Is that it was your research from 20 years ago?
To some degree, unwittingly, I think we've contributed this narrative. It's not just me. I'd name
other names, but I'll let them remain innocent for now. Well, now I'm having the opportunity to
sit opposite you, Stuart. So what is the advice around the timing of eating protein compared? Because
you've already said, like, you have to do some exercise with something heavy. Yeah.
So, you know, priority one is we got to go to the gym. If we don't do that, as Frederica mentioned,
absolutely spot on. Nothing happens when you eat more protein. People talk about a satiety effect.
I'm pretty lukewarm on that that happens unless you really ramp up your protein.
So, you know, let's sort of forget about that for now and say, go to the gym, then your daily
protein intake.
I like it in that 1.2 range.
We can agree.
Most people hit that.
Some people don't, but most do.
After that, the timing is this sort of, you know, and I hate to use the in the margins expression
or, you know, majoring in the minors.
It's one of these other, it's the last little twist of the cloth that you might get a couple of drips of benefit out.
But it's certainly not something that would make me say, you know, immediately post-exercise, you need to get your protein.
That concept, which was given the name probably about 15 to 20 years ago, the anabolic window, was tied more to the replenishment actually of muscle glycogen, which is muscle-stored carbohydrate.
than it was to protein metabolism.
But a lot of us did some work in this area
to try and see whether this was true.
And there's a good friend of mine named Sean Arendt,
who's down at the University of South Carolina,
and he's written a paper called,
instead of the anabolic window,
it's the anabolic garage or garage door.
So it's open for a long time, and it's really, really big.
In other words, it's probably open for about a day
or a day and a half.
So I could go to the gym first thing in the morning, eat very little protein until the evening.
And if I ate something with lots of protein then, then I would still get the benefit from the exercise I did that morning.
Good to go.
Yep.
Wow.
You can tell my train is straight after this.
I know.
I know.
And I know as soon as I've said that, I'm like, ah, am I going to upset some people now?
Yeah.
All the post-workout shakes.
I know.
And I run into these people.
And they're like, I heard you on that Zoe.
And I'm like, it's just science.
I'm just telling you the science.
Stuart, can I try the counter then?
Sure.
Sure, that's like fine.
But like you're working hard and you want to get the best benefit.
And so actually, why wouldn't you take, you know, the extra few percent?
Yep.
So what if he said that?
Would that change your advice?
And I think that's the rider, you know, had the privilege of working with some very
good athletes.
And, you know, for them, it is.
It's all about the detail.
details. And so putting a metal around your neck and standing on a podium is not who this advice
is for, who it might be sort of more pragmatic to begin the so-called recovery right away. And I get
that. I understand it. For most folks out there in regular society doing regular things and just
hoping to stay a little bit healthier, that type of detail and nuances, I think. It's an inefficient
message. The big one should be, just get enough protein, go to the gym.
continue, carry on. I'd love to talk about protein sources now. Yes, I was about to say.
Federic has been very patient. Very patient on this, exactly. You told our researcher that this
was something that you changed your mind on during the course of your career. Could you tell us
sort of where you began and where you are today? Yeah, I mean, I think it's pretty self-evident.
There are two, what I'll call the major scoring systems for protein. Essentially,
they come down to how digestible the protein is, so there's a digestibility issue, and how many
of these essential amino acids each protein has. When you look at it from that perspective,
animal source proteins would be superior. In other words, they would have a higher score than plant
source proteins. And everybody goes, oh, well, game over, you know, it's got a higher score.
They're the winner easily. And that was me, 25 plus years ago.
Fast forward, soy protein was the main plant protein that we had probably 15, 20 years ago.
And we noticed that's just not a whole lot different than it's usually dairy-based proteins that we're converting and comparing.
And now we're in a world where you've got access to a lot of plant-based protein sources.
And the diversity is extraordinary compared to what it was 25 years ago.
and we're beginning to conduct experiments, and we see very little difference between what happens
with plant source proteins and animal source proteins.
I would say that these are purified protein sources when we study this, and so we haven't
studied whole diets.
Well, actually, that's not true.
We have, but I can't tell you about that yet.
Have me on in another year, I'll tell you all about it.
Definitely.
Yeah, and I think it's fair to say that when we do that.
that, you know, even exclusively vegan diets are, if you're judicious about how you plan your
protein, you're covered.
The closer you get to the RDA, however, and the older you are, then it could be problematic.
And I think we've sort of agreed is that those are populations for whom we probably need
to pay attention anyway.
So plant-based diets are, you know, just, it requires a little bit of planning, but
for younger, middle age, especially active people, the differences between plant source and
animal source proteins is, like, it's trivial, another deep in the margins issue, in my opinion.
Yeah, and this is, so we're talking about quality earlier in the quick fire questions.
So the experiments that Stewart's referring to are like soy protein isolate, way protein isolate.
See, this is it like the pure protein.
But when we then look at the protein package, when we think about foods, it's a combination of plant foods that then provide this digestible, indispensable amino acid score.
I'll bridge it down.
They actually provide the same score as, say, a chicken breast, right?
So the key is combining plants that then gives you this really good score.
And then we take a step further and we think, okay, when we're combining plants, so when we're eating like legumes and nuts and seeds,
you're not just getting those amino acids, you're getting the fiber, the bioactive compounds,
the complex carbohydrates, which you don't get from the protein package in an animal protein.
So actually now we're in a place where there's so much evidence, and this is very getting excited,
right, that shows that if you switch some of your animal protein to plant protein,
you're actually prolonging your life, you're increasing longevity, you're decreasing your risk
of chronic disease because of this protein package that plants come in.
People say that plants are incomplete proteins, their poor quality.
That's not true.
The science is very clear.
The importance of combining plants is where the magic happens.
Yeah, if there's a myth to be busted, and Federica just touched on it, and I hear this a lot too,
and Christopher Gardner would tell you all about this, is that people say plants are deficient
in these, and they're not.
They might be low in certain amino acids, but they're not deficient.
In fact, it's really hard to find a plant source protein.
that is deficient in amino acids.
I find it fascinating to go around the world
and I'll call them food insecure regions
or regions where there's not a lot of animal protein consumed.
Regions of Southeast Asia, India, South America, the Caribbean,
everybody figured out that a grain and a legume together were good.
I'm so glad you're impressed
because I tell that to my undergraduate students
and they just glaze over and look at me in.
I think that's fascinating.
Could you help to explain it?
Because I also slightly glazed over, as you said.
Could you help me to understand what you just said?
It's the magic of food synergy.
It is.
It's incredible.
I mean, it can only be that so many people in disparate geographic areas of the world
have figured that out because there's an evolutionary pressure for it to happen,
like you survived.
And so I'm trite when I say this, but the undergrad seemed to resonate with it,
is that grains are low in an essential amino acid called lysine.
Legumes are pretty rich in lysine, but they're low in amino acids that contain sulfur.
There's two of them, methionine and cysteine.
But grains are high in those, and when you eat them together, you're good to go.
You get the lysine that you need.
You get the methionine and cysteine that you need.
And so this is like mixing, like, beans and...
It's my beans and rice.
It's lentils and rice.
Barley and lentils.
It's belt and your bolotti beans, right?
So another thing that we've had a lot of listener questions about is the idea of an upper
limit of protein absorption per serving.
Is there truth in this?
Do we need to spread out our protein intake?
Oh, we contributed to the noise in this one.
We can absorb a lot of protein.
I mean a lot, like hundreds of grams.
And so there's no sort of upper limit on absorption.
But we did publish a paper at one point that showed that when you ate,
20 grams of protein, that was all that your body could efficiently use.
When we doubled the dose and we went to 40, your body used a little bit more, but it was by no
means double the response. And so everybody walked away saying, oh, well, 20 grams is all you
can digest and absorb. And that's not the message. You can digest and absorb a lot more.
Your body just can't utilize it. And from when I say,
utilize it. I mean, your muscle couldn't utilize it. So we probably confused some people with that,
but people have taken and run with the concept. But we can eat a lot of protein. I think
Federica, you mentioned, is that we're very good at absorbing protein. Rarely does it not get
absorbed. And there's a little bit, but as we get older, it does go down. If I ate lots of protein
in one meal and not a lot later, actually, that is going to deliver all the protein I need
form, like my muscle growth and everything else over the next day. So this is like 20 grand.
This is more to do with some sort of optimal thing. But actually, I'm getting, I'm going to be
able to use it all. Yeah. If you ate it in one big meal or you ate it in three meals,
I don't think there would be a lot of difference. I think the advantage would go to the three
meals. We do have a study going on that. And so again, a year or so from now, we'd probably
be able to give you the answer. But the truth is, you can digest a lot of protein. It's not
capped out at 20 or 30 grams.
Now, Federica, we have a lot of our older Zoe members who ask for advice on how to eat adequate
protein without having to eat more food than they find actually they have appetite for.
Do you have any simple tips for them?
Yeah, increase nutrient density foods.
So make sure that you're eating foods that provide essential protein and essential nutrients.
So when I think about this, I think about things like beans and tofu and nuts and seeds and great
yogurt. They're very nutrient dense, so they don't take up too much volume. When you have
reduced appetite, that can be really helpful. I would love now to actually turn all of this
advice into really clear, actionable advice about what I can put on my plate. Maybe start with that,
like the healthiest sources of proteins. What should our listeners be eating? Look, I mean,
the traditional protein sources, everybody, I think could rhyme it off. They probably first say eggs,
meat, poultry, fish, great sources of protein, lots of other nutrients in there. Awesome. I think
eggs have been on the dirty list for too long. I think there's still a pretty good source of
protein, affordable, lots of good nutrients in there. But I think we can now begin to talk about
plant source proteins, so legumes, beans, pulses, these sorts of things as a bio-equivalent
form of protein. You might have to eat a little bit more, but probably not much.
so much more that you would worry about it.
I think a meal where people, I don't say under-consume protein,
but it tends to be carbohydrate heavy is breakfast.
And the trend these days, I'm sure it's the same in the UK, US, Canada,
it doesn't matter, Australia, is that there are lots of ultra-process foods
that are available at breakfast that really are doing everybody a disservice.
I like to teach students that if we shopped on the outside,
side of the grocery store, up the produce aisle, meat and dairy, grains, and stayed away from
the middle where all the good tasting, highly addictive.
High protein cookies.
Yes, exactly.
The protein ice cream, protein water, et cetera, we'd probably be a lot better off.
So we eat real food, whole food.
From that standpoint, then, I do like to talk a little bit more about protein at breakfast.
My super food at breakfast is Greek-style yogurt.
So a little bit higher in protein than the regular yogurt, probiotics, and it's a good
breakfast food, throw some nuts, throw some seeds, throw some fruit in there.
It's probably my go-to breakfast just about every day.
Yeah, and if you have Greek-style yogurt and you add 200 mils of kaffir,
kefir is exceptionally high in protein, actually, then as Stuart said, you have two teaspoons
of chia, the protein and fiber powerhouse plus omega-3 ALAs, some nuts and,
some fresh berries, you have got yourself between 20 and 30 grams of protein in that breakfast
in a regular-sized bowl. And it's such a great way to start the day and sit back to your
point about eggs. Eggs are great for breakfast too, right? And if you combine those with a bread that
has whole grains in it or even like a pumpernickel style bread, you can add some beans to that,
you've got a great breakfast that packs protein, other biactive nutrients and fiber at the same time.
So I think pivoting to thinking about how can we include not only protein, but also fiber, also probiotics,
like so fermented foods, all these things, then go back to this protein package.
How can we make the most of these meals?
And I think what's important to know is if we think about protein in a hierarchy of health impact, okay?
So like at the bottom you have these plant-based proteins.
That should be the majority of where we get our proteins from whole grains, legumes, soy products, nuts and seeds.
And Federica, we said this word legumes and pulses off.
Yeah. Beans and lentils. Chick peas. Yeah. Peas, green peas. Navy beans. Edomami beans. But if you think
about it, that's the majority of a protein, then the next level up is kefir, yogurt. So fermented
dairy is a great source of protein and it's good for us for lots of other reasons. Then the next
level up for me is oily fish. Oily fish are the healthiest animal protein. So they have the
omega-3 ALAs. They are consistently shown to improve longevity, cognitive function. They improve a lot
of things. Then above that you have eggs. So eggs are good for us. They're just not quite as good
as fish, in my opinion, for a protein source. And then above that, you have white meat. Right at the very
top, occasionally, you have red meat and kind of off the pyramid to the side and should not be a
source of protein every day is processed meat. I'm quite alarmed by the rise of like beef jerky
and other processed like salamis as like a healthy protein source. Processed red meat in no world is a
healthy protein source. Processed red meat is a class one carcinogen, and it's consistently shown
to be detrimental for health. So it should not be a daily protein source. So I think think about it
in that order of how well is this going to serve me for longevity and for decreasing my risk of
the long-term chronic diseases that really we're all trying to avoid it, right? That's,
I think that's a good, I've made that pyramid up, but I love it. I have no issues with that
pyramid. I'll say about jerky is that if you're worried about your sodium intake, it's
stay away from jerky.
I think what's interesting is that while the amount of protein that you're suggesting
is higher than I think, you know, it has been the standard guidance.
It's interesting that it still seems to line up very much with what we end up covering a lot
on this podcast around like the ability to eat that with a diet that's really supporting
your gut health and things like that.
So I feel that's actually very positive.
I would like to directly talk about protein supplements because I think that
many people jump to protein supplements and again like when I first went to the gym the consequence of
all of that advice was well you need to eat all of this protein really fast and you've got this
really high number so you know start taking this protein supplement straight afterwards which
I did for a number of years now I really worry about it because I look at it and I see that like
Zoe says this is a high risk processed food I gave that up as I started to understand in the last few years
like all these issues around processed foods,
but obviously it gives you a lot of protein.
What are your thoughts on that, Stuart?
So pros and cons.
The pros of a protein supplement, it's just protein.
If it's protein powder and you don't have,
you know, a lot of people are like,
well, I don't want fat, I don't want carbs
because, you know, they're going to kill you and et cetera.
So, yeah, I'm being trained, but you get my point.
And maybe there's a time and a place for that.
It's convenient.
And when I deal with a lot of athletes who are in sort of different places,
they can't they don't have access to the foods that they would normally eat so i'm like check
outside of that it's really hard to think of too many pros uh the cons are as you point out it's
processed it's stripped of other nutrients i mean i love your pyramid i mean the other part is
is we put the big umbrella over the top and i'm like it's pretty delicious too right like you know
i mean i think that we've lost a little bit of sight of um food is an enjoyable commodity that we
spend, you know, our time cooking and eating and with friends sometimes, and we focus on
nutrition and it's ingredients, but we all eat food. And I think maybe we've lost sight of some
of the enjoyment that comes with eating food. So from that standpoint, when you look at some of the
bars that are out there and you look at their contents and you look at the amount of sugar
that it's in them, the amount of sodium that's in them, I'm okay with those if you think that
that's, you know, a snack. But, you know, just let's be clear that it's not a free pass and it's
not, you know, a lot of people say, oh, it's healthier than a chocolate bar. And I'm like,
well, if there's the chocolate bar, this is how much healthier the protein bar is. It might be a
small nudge, but it's not like, you know, this is a free pass and this is super healthy. And, you know,
hopefully we've made the point clear that that window and everything else is sort of overhyped in
terms of its importance. And I know it's boring, but a food first approach is going to serve
you a whole lot better than any form of supplement will. I work with athletes, and I will say
is that they go to supplements, and the number one reason for it is convenience. If you're having
like a weight protein isolate or a soy protein isolate added to your smoothie that you're making
yourself, there's less risk. But a lot of these supplements are high-risk foods. So if you have a
Snickers bar. It's a high-risk candy bar. If you add protein to it, it's a Snickers bar with
protein, but it's still a Snickers bar, right? Like, it's not actually a good source of protein.
The data is also really clear that the more of these foods, these high-risk processed foods you have,
the more you're decreasing your chances of living a long and healthy life. So the study I love,
the test here at our study in nature, they calculated that ultra-processed food and high-risk food
consumption gives you a 32% lower odds of healthy aging. So when we think about protein supplementation,
are you just adding weight protein isolate because you're an athlete? Or are you eating protein
cookies? If it's B, if it's the protein cookies or protein Snickers bar, you're actually
possibly actively reducing your healthy life years. It's not a good idea. So protein supplements,
I think is too broad a term nowadays. It's gone from being genuinely just added isolated
protein to junk food that has got a protein health halo sprinkled on top.
And that to me is just a no.
I mean, the thing that I'm struck at the end of this is once again, there's been a big
role of big food companies into this story, right?
Because you've talked about these individual foods has been really bad.
And both of you are like very aligned on that.
But it's not just like randomly happened that you get the Snickers bar that says, you know,
high in protein or the ice cream or any of these.
And I think they play incredibly strongly to why there are so many listeners who contact us
and ask because people see this all over the supermarket.
They're like, oh, wow, I must be short of protein.
And also, oh, so if I get the thing that's high in protein, that actually means that this
food, whatever it is, is going to be good for me.
And it's incredibly cynical.
And there's usually a markup.
People will pay 20% more for the same product with added protein.
great, great moneymaker
because way protein isolate is super cheap
so you add that to your
waffles, frozen waffles
and you're suddenly selling them for more money
and making more money in the process.
It's a complete marketing play unfortunately
and it's not serving people's health
it's just serving profit margins at the moment.
Final questions,
we've gone through lots and lots of advice.
If I was going to ask you to speak to the listener
and just give one,
simple, actionable tip that they could take away right now that would start to make a change,
to make them healthier, what would it be?
Does it have to be nutrition related?
No, no, it doesn't.
Then exercise, it seems trite, but after years of doing this and essentially believing,
thinking based on data that protein was more important than it was, you know, I've come to
the realization that it's the exercise.
that really drives the bus, and protein is a small part of the benefit that could accrue from
doing the exercise, and that doesn't matter whether you're a runner or a lifter or anything.
That's far more important than getting more protein in your diet, and enjoy food.
I just think that we've obsessed around ingredients for too long, and we've lost the sight of a little bit of what it means to sit down.
and, you know, make and then eat a good meal, whether it's by ourselves.
I know it's not always motivating, having lived alone to cook for yourself, but particularly
with other people, beginning to the older I get, I think, you know, meals with friends,
those are special times and should be cherished for sure.
I would love people to start thinking about how they can replace some of the protein
they're getting from animal foods, like processed meats, red meats, or, to your point,
Jonathan's snack foods like protein supplement cookies to healthier plant-based proteins that we know
are going to improve longevity and outcomes in the long term. So how can you integrate more lentils,
more beans? Can you try tofu or tempe? Try different oily fish. Like add macrol to your shopping
list, add some anchovies, some tin sardines, and just really see how you can integrate these
healthy proteins into your everyday life and get rid of some of the ones that are like you
to be doing more harm than good. I'm going to try and do a
summary, at least of the key things that we covered. I think my starting point is the recommended
daily protein intake, which is sort of 0.8 grams per kilogram, is too low. And so that is really
interesting. The second big thing I'm taking away is you have to lift something heavy to get any
benefit from protein. So if you're listening to this and you're not lifting anything heavy,
don't get tricked into all of these products saying eat more protein because it's not relevant.
The question is, what could you do to lift something heavy in order to use it?
The next thing in my mind, and Federica, I know you've been doing a lot of work on this
is like the right amount of protein for you is personalized.
There isn't just one single number, and that's, I think, part of the reasons you're talking
about, you know, this recommended daily intake being too low.
So you're saying, you know, for regular healthy adult, it might be like one to one point two,
so it's like a bit higher than the number that we've described.
Yep. But in certain cases, and you're particularly talking about people as they're getting much older because it's harder to absorb this and it's so important to protect them, it might be higher. You know, when you're very young, you're describing like what you get in breast milk and it's a bit higher. But in no cases is it as high as we've been hearing a lot from sort of influences and indeed from the trainers if we go and see them. And so, you know, I think your own intake is really interesting. You say sort of 1.3 to 1.4 and you're obviously, you know, serious about wanting to protect your health.
than going to the gym, if you're working out a lot and you're talking about this is the CrossFit,
this is the power athlete, hardcore, the person who's like optimizing this at the very best
is at 1.6. So again, like still well below the two. So even if you're aspiring to that, that's sort of
1.6. The big thing that you've changed your mind about is this idea that the only way you can sort
of solve for your protein intake is eating lots and lots of meat. And that actually that's really
a myth. And it turns out that plants are not deficient in amino acids, but you can't just eat
one plant. So you've got to eat this sort of balanced diet. The timing is not a big concern.
So again, unless you are literally competing for your country, you don't need to worry about
eating protein immediately after your workout, which again reduces some of this pressure, I think,
to eat these protein shakes. Because if you're out and about, right, then you sort of have to do it
immediately, but if you've got more time, then I think it comes into play. And then I think
you talked about some really practical things, which I thought was really great. Like, you could think
about breakfast where you're probably not eating a very healthy diet and you may not be getting
very much protein. Greek-style yogurt, mixed with kefir, which I had not realized was particularly
high in protein as well, but also like eggs, eggs and whole grain bread. That's a fantastic breakfast.
So breakfast being one of those things you could really change to improve both health and protein.
and that in general, there are these obvious things we think about being protein like eggs
and maybe oily fish and dairy, those are good, but actually there are all of these things
like legumes and pulses as your chickpeas and lentils and beans that actually have lots of
protein in.
And I was worried you were going to tell me I wasn't getting enough protein, but actually I think
it sounds like I'm going to be okay.
Yeah, the odd part, again, about the complementation that we talked about, about the grain
and the legume or the bean, is these days.
because in past times when people had to do that,
the legumes were the rate-limiting thing.
They were hard to find.
Now we can get them almost everywhere.
And there's a variety of different sources.
It used to be it was two different types of beans
and there were peas.
Now it's all kinds of things.
So I think that that's an important point.
The pairing with the grain, it might be tasty.
It's actually not necessary if you eat enough legumes.
But it makes a great base for any meal.
If you have a legume and a grain, you know, quinoa, peas, beans and barley, spelt and lentils.
It's just instant pairing.
If we could take the protein out of quinoa, it has the same protein quality score as milk.
Huh.
Yeah, there you go.
Amazing.
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