4.7 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 20 February 2023
⏱️ 85 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Ty Beal, nutrition researcher and Research Advisor on the Knowledge Leadership team at the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), has spent the last few years diving into the science globally to see what the most nutrient-dense foods are.
He also studies the nutritional deficiencies that we’re facing worldwide — in developing and well-off countries — to see what’s really happening here.
In this episode, you’ll learn what the most nutrient-dense foods are, the most common micronutrient deficiencies we’re currently facing and why this is crucial to pay attention to, how we can address these issues, and what the real food rankings should look like.
Ty and Dr. Anthony Gustin also discuss regenerative agriculture, different diets like vegan and carnivore, whether seed oils are unhealthy, and the bioavailability of food.
You’ll also hear Ty’s opinion on whether we should reduce our meat consumption, including red meat, his thoughts on saturated fat, and whether plant toxins are really an issue.
If you’re not familiar with Ty Beal’s work, he’s a Washington, D.C., based researcher and Research Advisor on the Knowledge Leadership team at the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN).
His objective work has been quoted in dozens of research papers to date, and he has extensive experience studying diet quality, food affordability, sustainable food systems, micronutrient deficiencies, global health, and more.
You’ll find a breakdown of the topics Ty Beal and Dr. Anthony Gustin get into in this episode below:
What got Ty Beal into nutrition research
What he changed on his own health journey
What makes a food ultra processed?
What makes ultra processed foods so bad for your health?
The most prevalent nutrient deficiencies worldwide
Why are these nutrient deficiencies happening?
What are some of the most nutrient dense foods?
Where Ty goes to see the nutrient density of a food
What about the bioavailability of foods?
Is there enough scientific evidence to say that we should reduce our animal consumption?
Ty shares his thoughts on regenerative agriculture and using circular systems, including what the latter is
Should red meat be demonized as much as it currently is?
Is saturated fat really bad for us?
Ty also shares his thoughts on consuming seed oils
Resources mentioned in the episode:
Ty Beal’s work on Google Scholar
Ty Beal’s Twitter
Friend or Foe? The Role of Animal-Source Foods in Healthy and Environmentally Sustainable Diets
Protein quality as a complementary functional unit in life cycle assessment (LCA)
Estimating national and subnational nutrient intake distributions of global diets
The Natural State Podcast Episode 166: Dr. Bill Schindler - Learning How To Eat Like a Human
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Natural State podcast. I am your host Dr. Anthony Guston. It is |
0:10.2 | my belief that the natural state of penny living organisms' health and that our artificial |
0:14.5 | habitat has forced us into having artificial health problems. This show is my attempt to |
0:18.7 | dive deep and learn about using nutrition, sleep, movement, relationships and more to help |
0:23.8 | you reclaim your natural state of health in a modern world and show you how to thrive |
0:27.8 | in an environment that's stacked against you. If you enjoyed today's show, you can find |
0:31.3 | out more details and information at Dr. Anthony Guston.com. |
0:36.3 | This episode I have Thai deal on the show who is a nutrition researcher. He was done a lot |
0:42.4 | of phenomenal, I believe, to be very unbiased research. He has a very interesting background |
0:48.3 | that led him to looking at nutrition and trying to become very fair and sort of a skew |
0:54.6 | with a lot of major nutrition researchers have right now, which is a financial bias from |
1:00.0 | a large industry. He doesn't take any industry money and he does a lot of work. He looks |
1:04.4 | at things from a very objective level of, he's done a lot, he's been quoted a lot in papers, |
1:09.5 | but it caught a lot in nutrition density of really trying to figure out what are the |
1:13.1 | most nutrient dense foods, but not only that of where are these foods available, where geographically |
1:18.9 | are we having different micronutrient deficiencies, and how we could dress those for real food. |
1:24.4 | He has written a lot of amazing papers, ranking these foods and showing certain places, |
1:30.3 | you know, and have spilled too many of the beans here and ruined the show early, but you |
1:33.5 | know, what are the most nutrient dense foods in which areas? He has also sort of been |
1:39.7 | exposing some of the ridiculousness in things like the food compass, thefts, reports, and |
1:45.1 | we don't delve into it too much in this podcast, but he does a lot of great research there |
1:48.4 | around assessing different food profiling systems. So you can really figure out for |
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