12 Myths About Beef
12 Myths About Beef
12 Myths About Beef
BEEF
Prepared by,
Prof. Dr. Abdul Salam Babji,
Chng Soo Ee
Wolyna Pindi
Fact:
3 ounces of cooked lean bef contain 73 mg
of cholesterol.
Fact:
3 ounces of lean roast beef contain 169 calories; 3 ounces of
top loin (strip) steak contain 195 calories. 3 ounces of baked
chicken, without skin, contain 174 calories while 3 ounces of
fried chicken, with skin, contain 209 calories. Actually, beef is
ideal for modern, low-calorie diets because todays leaner
cattle provide beef that is, on the average, 10% lower in
calories than it was in years past.
Fact:
Beef is highly digestible more digestible, in fact, than
vegetables. Beefs ingredients are 96% digested, and its
abundant nutrients are almost completely absorbed and used
by the body.
Fact:
Beef actually contains considerably less fat than is generally
assumed. 3 ounces of cooked lean beef contain about 9 g of
fat and less than half of that is saturated. Of all the fat in the
U. S. food supply, 36% comes from meat and fish. The
increase in fat intake in this country has been caused primarily
by an increase in use of vegetable fats. Fats and oils now
account for 43% of the fat in the food supply.
ANIMAL FATS
Fact:
To date, reported links between diet and cancer have been
mostly hypothetical. A group of scientists convened by the
American Cancer Society concluded that no single dietary
factor, including fat or meat, could possibly account for more
than a small fraction of cancer in the U. S. In any event, the
issue is fat, of all types, and not meat per se. If a person
accepts the theory that a low fat diet will help prevent cancer,
beef should probably be in that persons diet, because modern
beef is lower in fat and calories and high in protein, vitamins
and minerals.
Fact:
The meat industry is the most regulated of all food industries.
It has been described as the most regulated industry in the
nation, with the exception of the nuclear energy industry.
Physical inspections of meat are made in packing plants by
certified inspectors from the state of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture. When a violation is uncovered, it results in
substantial news coverage because it is a rare and truly
unusual event.
Fact:
Beef actually contains substantially larger amounts of certain
vital nutrients. Beef contains nine times as much Vitamin B-12
ounce for ounce as chicken, about two and a half times as
much zinc. Beef supplies a large share of essential nutrients
and a relatively small share of calories. For example, a three
ounce serving of lean beef supplies only 8% of an adults daily
calorie requirementsbut 45% of the daily protein
requirement.
Fact:
New research on the nutritional composition of beef and on
amounts of meat actually consumed by Americans show that
beef can be used regularly by almost any consumer who is
concerned about diet and health. It is now known that red meat
supplies calories, fat, saturated fat and cholesterol in amounts
far below the limits recommended by many scientific and
health organizations. Consumers who want to cut down on
calories and fat and cholesterol can do so without cutting
down on the amount of beef they consume.
Fact:
A three-ounce serving of beef supplies 26% of the
recommended daily allowance of iron for an adult male. And
the iron provided by beef is heme iron, a type that is 3 to 5
times more easily absorbed by the body that the iron found in
other foods. It also has a booster effect on iron in other foods
consumed at the same time. Much of the iron in spinach, for
instance, is not made available to the body unless it is eaten in
combination with another food. Beef provides iron and also
serve as a catalyst to help you get the most iron out of other
foods.
Fact:
The grain fed to livestock is mostly feed grain, for which
there is little or no demand as human food. Grain either food
grain or feed grain will not be produced unless there is a
market for it. The livestock industry provides that market.
Actually, the grain fed to beef cattle represents only 15% of
the total feed for cattle.
Fact:
About one billion acres of the nations 2.2 billion acres of land
are used for pasture and grazing. The vast majority of this land
is too rugged, too arid, too wet or too high to cultivate crops of
any kind. If it were not for grazing ruminant (four-stomach)
animals like cattle, this one billion acres of land would have
no productive use. Cattle are able to convert otherwise
unusable cellulose in grass and shrubs into nutritious beef.
Fact:
Americans consume an average of 2 ounces of cooked beef per
day considerably less than the recommended daily intake of
foods from the meat group. When you consider the superior
nutritional value of beef and its genuine good taste, is it any
wonder that it continues to be an American favorite both at
home and when dining out.
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