I was wondering which is better pre, during and post hike as a protein source. Soy or whey?
Human muscle has a lot of glutamine whereas soy protein doesn't have a lot I have been told.
This appears to be a commercial advocacy/advertising website run by the American Egg Board. Not a reliable source.
Yes, soy contains phytoestrogens (weak estrogen mimics). According to one moderately reliable source, they have not been shown to have damaging effects on men: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soybean#PhytoestrogenFYI the latest research on SOY is suggesting some not so nice things about its effect on men
Perhaps because the whole site is an ad...Yeah, I knew that link was the egg board. But I only had a minute to post, and it was the cleanest link I could find, with the fewest ads.
I have no idea if eggs are the best source of protein, but they certainly are a good source. They do, however, contain significant amounts of fat (~11 g) and cholesterol (42 mg) (both mostly in the yolk). Current research suggests that one per day is ok, but ~13 grams of protein (the amount in one egg) is not enough to meet one's daily needs but might be enough to aid recovery. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_(food)#Nutritional_valueI think it's pretty well established that of generally available foods, eggs have the highest quality protein
Don't know which is better. Look up the protein breakdown for each and compare it to the requirements. Whether the requirements for recovery are the same as the general requirements might also be an open question.Neil said:So, which protein source is better for hikers?
The original report can be found here. Pg 23 shows your graphAs for carbon footprint - read an article yesterday re: "Meater Eater's Guide" - I have no idea about the accuracy of the science, especially the graphic, but FWIW it shows that egg production has a relatively low carbon footprint.
Dead serious.Neil - I don't think there is a answer to your question - is it really a serious one?
Yes, your muscles need time to repair the accumulated damage. (This is why power lifters need to rest their muscles every other day and AT hikers need to take ~1 day per week off.)I find that full recovery after certain hikes takes longer than maybe it should (3-4 days after a 12 hour plus hike) and was thinking there might be a lot more to it than just replenishing muscle glycogen.
Nah, not me.And you might be getting a bit older than you used to be...
Doug
This appears to be a commercial advocacy/advertising website run by the American Egg Board. Not a reliable source.
Perhaps the info is correct, perhaps not. I'd get the info from a more reliable source before I believe it.
try nuts.
Perhaps human butt muscle would be the very best protein source.
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