In a Nutri-Score analysis of plant-based analogues to animal products: meats and milks were most commonly graded equally (D and B, respectively), except plant-based poultry with a C. Plant-based yoghurt was generally graded better (B against C) but plant-based cheese score was lower (E against D).
mdpi.comSubmitted by Unethical_Orange t3_10gjic6 in science
Unethical_Orange OP t1_j5330y3 wrote
This title is extracted from the section 3.4 of the results. But this paper, albeit short is incredibly dense. Here’s some more information to complement it:
Figure 1 shows the composition of the plant-based alternatives.
Most remarkably, cheese imitations were exceptionally based on vegetable oils (83,1%) compared to other analogues whose main composition was either nuts, coconut, grains or pulses.
Furthermore, tables 3 and 4 analyse the nutritional composition of both meats and dairy products (milks, yoghurt and cheese). In those, we find (with p-values under 0,05):
Interestingly, regardless of these findings, the authors state that:
>...the substitution of specific food groups with plant-based alternatives may not support an equivalent or improved diet.
I wonder the reasons why, as most alternatives had either the same or higher Nutri-Score on average, except cheese (which scored poorly in both cases).
My question is supported by the data shown in tables 3 and 4 where plant-based products were shown to contain significantly less saturated fats and higher fiber across most categories, which are typically associated with better health outcomes (1), (2).