Tag Archive for: veggie burger

Making Burgers Leaner

The series of Memos on meatless burgers generated many interesting comments. With the major holiday for grilling just two days away, I want to show you how to reduce calories in beef burgers.

First, use a leaner cut of meat for your burgers. Ground sirloin is often designated 90/10, ground round 85/15, ground chuck as 80/20, and hamburger meat as 70/30. The first number is the percentage of protein while the second is the percentage of fat by weight, but the grams of fat are vastly difference. A 4-ounce burger made of ground sirloin has eight grams of fat while the most commonly used cut for burgers at 80/20 has 21 grams of fat. That’s a difference of close to 120 calories, and those calories come from fat.

Second, you can consider the amount of fat lost while grilling. For 80/20 it can be up to seven grams of fat or about 60 calories while 90/10 only loses about one gram of fat or just 10 calories. However, the difference in shrinkage would be significant. The four ounces can drop to 2.6 ounces with the 80/20, but you lose just under one ounce in the 90/10. That means the ground sirloin will give you a bigger burger with a lot less fat.

How do you decide? It depends on whether burgers are a staple of your diet. If you have a burger or two only on outdoor-grilling holidays, who cares? If you grill burgers a couple times of week, the fat and calories begin to add up. Add lots of veggies——tomato, lettuce, onion, pickle—and use a whole wheat bun; check the calories in the buns because they can vary greatly.

You can have your burger, meatless or beef, and enjoy it, too. Of course, there are a whole lot more options for grilling, but to me there’s nothing like a good burger grilled outdoors.

Have a Happy 4th of July and enjoy your Independence Day celebration. I’ll be back next week with another health topic to discuss in detail. If you’re not in the U.S., I hope you’ll grill along with us.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

The Bottom Line on Meatless Burgers

There are a couple more differences between the meatless burgers and beef burgers. To get the red color, the Impossible Burger uses soy leghemoglobin from the roots of soy plants, while the Beyond Burger uses beet juice. Both are vegan and give the burgers their red color. The Impossible Burger also adds some B vitamins and minerals. The Beyond Burger seems to add only some iron.

Are the meatless burgers healthy or not? From a strict look at fat content, no. Cholesterol level, yes. Sodium content, no, depending on how much salt you add to your beef burger; if you add more than one-sixth teaspoon of salt to your burger, you’ve lost that advantage. In effect, they’re very comparable to 80-20 burgers you would cook.

The real difference is that the meatless burgers are sourced from vegetable protein. Even that may strike up a debate because one uses soy protein while the other uses pea protein. Some people try to avoid soy, although there’s no real reason for it with the exception of being allergic to soy. (Check The Bottom Line on Soy Protein in the Store).

The other difference is that they both have carbohydrates and fiber because they’re sourced from plants. While there’s not a lot of fiber, that’s an advantage over beef.

The critical factor is how the burgers are prepared and presented. The final fat count will depend on how long the burgers are cooked: the longer any burger cooks, the more fat it loses to the grill. The presentation also matters. Buns, mayonnaise, cheese (for vegetarians who eat dairy), ketchup, and other condiments can take a 250 calorie burger and explode it to 700 calories or more.

There’s no information available about the environmental effects of meatless burgers, but usually vegan foods are environmentally friendlier than animal products even with the shipping and processing necessary for faux foods.

Beyond Patties

You can find Beyond Meat burger patties in some grocery stores in addition to their brand of plant-based bratwurst sausage, Italian sausage, and meat crumbles. Would your chili or meatloaf taste different with faux beef? We’ve tried cooking with other brands of vegan “beef” and noticed only a lack of fat, although if we use beef, we usually rinse it after browning it to remove most of the fat. The lower cholesterol in the meatless beef would be a big nutritional plus, but of course all this scientifically created food comes at a price: expect to pay two or three times as much as for plain old ground beef.

The Bottom Line

On paper, the meatless burgers could potentially be healthier than beef burgers. Whether they’re healthy or not is a different story. I haven’t seen research on how the meatless burgers respond to flames and whether they may produce undesirable chemicals. On top of that, the presentation mentioned earlier also matters.

Most likely whether they’re successful or not depends on the taste. I haven’t tasted either yet but I’ve planned a tasting barbecue soon, and I’ll let you know what I find out. Until then, it’s beef burgers for me. It would be exciting to have a plant-based burger that meets the taste test. Let me know how you feel if you try them.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Defining Healthier Burgers

Other than being plant-based, how do these burgers compare for being healthy? In order to know that, we must define “healthy.” Beef is criticized, no matter how it’s raised and processed, for having too much unhealthy fat. How about the Impossible and Beyond Meat burgers?

A burger generally uses 80/20 beef, which means 80% protein to 20% fat by weight. That isn’t how it turns out in calories. A typical four-ounce beef patty has 280 calories with 20 grams of protein and 22 grams of fat. There’s also 80 mg of cholesterol.

Both faux burgers offer 20 grams of protein, but then the differences begin. The Impossible Burger has 14 grams of fat in a four-ounce burger with no cholesterol. The Beyond Burger has 18 grams of fat and no cholesterol. There’s a little less fat in the vegan burgers, but it’s fat that makes a burger a burger so they’re about tied.

One difference is in sodium levels. Beef does not have sodium added, so it starts with about 80 mg of sodium while the vegan burgers come in with close to 400 mg of sodium each—but you know you’re going to salt that burger before you eat it, so to be fair, you need to factor in whatever salt you add. What I don’t know is whether the sodium is critical to the vegan burgers or not. Because it’s a manufactured product, does the sodium have to be there as a preservative or something to that effect? Could they be manufactured with less sodium without sacrificing taste?

I’ll finish this up this weekend so you can get the menu set for the 4th of July.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Are You Ready for Meatless Burgers?

Grilling season is here and that means all kinds of meat get char-broiled. I love a good burger, but that leaves a growing segment of the population out of luck: vegans and vegetarians. Grilled vegetables are great, from asparagus to zucchini, but some people love the sensation of chowing down on a burger. They miss out.

There are veggie burgers out there. I’ve had Boca Burgers and black bean burgers as well. They may be shaped like a burger, but the taste often leaves me feeling cheated. That may not be the case any more with two new additions: the Impossible Burger and the Beyond Meat Burger. Even before I could dig into the background of each, there have been a number of articles questioning whether these burgers are actually healthier than regular burgers. That’s what we’ll focus on this week: what’s in these burgers and whether they’re healthier than a regular burger.

In checking the labels, one difference is the protein source. The Impossible uses soy-based proteins while the Beyond uses pea protein. One thing to note is that they’re both proteins because they have all the necessary amino acids or can make them from the essential amino acids contained within. I’ll get into the rest of the ingredients on Thursday to check whether they’re healthier than beef burgers.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet