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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Healthy Living / Barbecue Meat a Safer Choice than Packaged Protein Foods

Barbecue Meat a Safer Choice than Packaged Protein Foods

by Dr. Kaayla T. Daniel / Affiliate Links ✔

barbecue meat vs veggie burgersIt’s barbecue time, and scare stories are already in the news about the dangers of cooking meat, fish and poultry on the grill. Most of those warnings concern the formation of carcinogens and mutagens known as heterocyclic amines (HCAs) during the grilling process.

While it’s probably wise to enjoy barbecue meat such as char-broiled steaks and blackened catfish only as an occasional special treat, these news reports leave out a very important fact.

The greatest danger from heterocyclic amines (HCAs) is not from barbecue meat or grilled steaks.  Rather, it is from processed and packaged protein foods including veggie burgers and other approxi-meats.

Industrially processed proteins derived from soy, corn, wheat and other grains contain plenty of HCAs, and the levels only increase with the addition of flavor enhancing soy sauces and marinades.

It’s myth that HCAs are mostly found in fried or grilled beef, poultry and fish. The truth is that HCAs are formed in any pyrolyzed, protein-rich food. For example, soy protein plus sugar subjected to high heat and pressure at the processing plant ends up with potent mutagens such as 2-amino-9H-pyrido (2,3-b) indole and 2-amino-3-methyl-9H-pyrido (2,3-b) indole.

All commercial soy sauces come right out of the bottle with HCAs known as 1-methyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrobeta-carboline-3-carboxylic acid (MTCCA). When we add sugar to soy sauce — a combination found ready made in many marinades and barbecue sauces — even more heterocyclic amines are formed.

The beta carbolines found in commercial ketchups and fish sauces also spur the formation of additional HCAs.

In brief, the higher the heat and pressure and the longer the duration, the more HCAs are formed. Combine with sauces and other ingredients high in HCAs, heat again and even more are formed.

Because modern plant protein products such as textured vegetable protein (TVP) and soy protein isolate (SPI) may undergo three or more heat treatments before they reach the supermarket or health food store, they can carry high levels of HCAs. These industrially processed foods are likely to contain much higher levels of HCAs than real foods prepared at home.

The more types of HCAs found in a given product or meal, the greater the risk. As T. Sugimura of the National Cancer Center Research Institute in Tokyo puts it:

“Heterocyclic amines are probably involved in the development of human cancer in the presence of other carcinogens, tumor promoters and factors stimulating cancer progression. HCAs most affect the liver, but lung and stomach tumors, lymphomas, leukemias and myocardial lesions also occur.”

Should we be worried about HCAs?

The short answer is “yes.”

HCAs appear naturally in the body, but never in the quantities provided by today’s overly — and repeatedly — heated food products. In animal studies, mutagenic HCAs are most likely to turn carcinogenic when eaten regularly rather than sporadically. HCAs are also most likely to trigger human cancer in the presence of other carcinogens. Thus the consistent presence of nitrosamines, MSG and HCAs in heavily processed plant protein foods poses a triple threat.

To date most of the news stories on HCAs has centered on grilled and barbecue meat, fish and poultry. Grilled tempeh and tofu would probably gain some HCAs this way as well.

The real danger though is not from putting traditional real foods such as meat, poultry, fish, tempeh or tofu on the barbie, but eating industrially processed plant proteins. HCAs do pose health risks, but most are formed at the processing plant, not in the home kitchen or on the patio.

 

Sources

For an extensive discussion of the research on HCAs in soy and other highly processed industrial foods and a list of citations, read Chapter 11 of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food (New Trends, 2005).

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Category: Healthy Living
Dr. Kaayla T. Daniel

Kaayla Daniel PhD, CCN is known as the Naughty Nutritionist. She is author of The Whole Soy Story and co-author of Nourishing Broth both endorsed by leading health experts.

Dr. Daniel’s practice offers solutions for healthy aging, cognitive enhancement, digestive and reproductive disorders, and recovery from soy and vegetarian diets.

She has appeared on the Dr. Oz Show and the PBS series Healing Quest and is a sought after lecturer around the world.

drkaayladaniel.com/

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Reader Interactions

Comments (30)

  1. Wade Schoenemann via Facebook

    Jul 27, 2014 at 10:01 pm

    especially if it’s verified 100% grass-fed beef

    Reply
  2. chloe

    Jun 14, 2013 at 1:57 pm

    Great post. Once again a reminder that eating whole foods is the most important principle to follow. Are grilled vegetable safe?

    Reply
    • rachel

      Jun 16, 2013 at 9:11 pm

      Chloe, I just googled “Does grilling vegetables form HCAs?” I’m seeing a bunch of results which say “No.” I haven’t found any result that says “Yes.”

  3. Jennifer Greene via Facebook

    Jun 13, 2013 at 1:18 pm

    But Sarah, I’m skeptical. Dr. Daniel didn’t provide any evidence (unless you buy her book). And the evidence I COULD find online (like this: says that in a head-to-head contest with beef and pork, “packaged [veggie] protein food” (tempeh burger) was clearly safer, generating zero HCA when fried.

    Reply
    • woly

      Jun 14, 2013 at 8:30 pm

      Good to see I wasnt the only one who thought this!

  4. joette calabrese

    Jun 13, 2013 at 8:13 am

    as always, Kaayla gives us the info that is most pertinent; that life requires choices and educating ourselves before making them is a responsibility that lies in our hands only.

    i’ve made mine. tonight is grass fed lamb chops, sauerkraut and a glass of organic wine. ‘anyone care to join me?

    Reply
  5. Sandi

    Jun 12, 2013 at 4:53 pm

    Scary stuff, right?!
    Fresh food first 🙂

    Reply
  6. foodreporter

    Jun 12, 2013 at 9:04 am

    I look for peer-reviewed science to back up statements like the ones presented in this piece. Unfortunately, Dr. Daniel has not provided any such references. “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.”

    Here’s some evidence: http://nutritionfacts.org/video/heterocyclic-amines-in-eggs-cheese-and-creatine/

    Reply
    • foodreporter

      Jun 12, 2013 at 9:13 am

      *Other than saying there are citations contained within her own book (which is available for $20.99).
      I note that Dr. Daniel’s book was published in 2005, and the research findings I found are more recent than that.

    • Helen T

      Jun 14, 2013 at 8:06 am

      Foodreporter, it depends on who is doing the research. So many institutions now are discredited. Hardly anyone posting here currently believes research rubberstamped from the CDC or FDA. I look to trustworthy sources and the research they present,
      like Dr. Daniel.

    • woly

      Jun 14, 2013 at 8:29 pm

      So youre saying that Dr Daniel is correct and any peer reviewed evidence to the contrary is some sort of conspiracy? Hmm. I assume you will say that statement is wrong so I ask, what type of evidence would convince you that this article is incorrect?

  7. Beeb

    Jun 12, 2013 at 6:51 am

    My thoughts are as long as you keep your BBQ clean in between each cook and try not to burn your food and of course that the food you are cooking is fresh and not processed and organic if poss then all should be well! The other thing to consider is any oil you might use. Butter, Olive oil and Coconut oil are all good…Coconut oil will allow higher temperatures and there are brands that are tasteless which helps as we don’t always want the coconut flavour with everything!
    Now i’m feeling hungry!!

    Reply
  8. thehealthyhomeeconomist via Facebook

    Jun 11, 2013 at 4:58 pm

    FYI .. excellent comment from Stanley Fishman, author of Tender Grassfed Meat on this blog post … on how to grill totally safely. Must read if you love to grill out (which I most certainly do :))

    Reply
    • Tracey

      Jun 11, 2013 at 7:43 pm

      So would this mean barbecuing with propane might technically be safer than charcoal since I could probably control the flame more?

  9. Cyndi

    Jun 11, 2013 at 3:17 pm

    We cooked over fires for thousands of years and survived it somehow.

    Reply
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