Abstract
Plant-based diets are recommended for personal health and to protect the environment. Plant-based protein foods available in supermarkets include traditional options, such as canned and dried legumes, and an increasing range of meat analogues such as plant-based sausages. This study aims to compare the nutritional content, healthiness, and cost of canned and reconstituted dried legumes with the same factors of plant-based meat alternatives. Information on the nutritional content, ingredients, and nutrient claims of canned legumes (N = 112), dried legumes (N = 21), and meat alternatives (tofu, felafels, and meat analogues) (N = 68) was obtained from Nutritrack (2019), a database of New Zealand (NZ) packaged foods available in supermarkets. The mean (SD) energy, protein, total fat, sodium, and fibre content, and the proportion of products fortified with iron, B12, and zinc was calculated. Healthiness was assessed using estimated Health Star Rating (HSR) and comparison with United Kingdom (UK) sodium targets. Product data were linked with household purchasing data from Nielsen Homescan® to compare the mean purchase price/100 g. The number and type of nutrient claims on packaging were identified. All canned and dried legumes and plain tofu scored an HSR ≥ 3.5; for other sub-categories of meat alternatives, 29% or fewer products scored ≥3.5. Although all tofu met UK sodium targets, less than half of the products within other categories met the associated target; meat alternatives (46%), canned legumes (21%), and baked beans (17%). Reconstituted dried legumes were the cheapest plant protein source (Mean = NZ$0.30, SD = 0.16/100 g (lowest of four categories)) compared to meat alternatives (‘Other’ meat-free products mean = NZ$2.57, SD = 0.88/100 g (highest of six categories)). The most common nutrient claims on meat alternatives were vegetarian/vegan, protein, and dietary fibre. Fifteen percent of meat alternatives were fortified with iron, and 12% each for Vitamin B12 and zinc. Although meat alternatives offer consumers more choice, these products may be less healthy and are more expensive than the more traditional plant-based protein sources—canned and dried legumes.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, L.Y., S.M. and K.B.; methodology, L.Y., S.M. and K.B.; formal analysis, L.Y., S.M., K.B., A.R., J.T. and C.C.; investigation, A.R., J.T. and C.C.; writing—original draft preparation, L.Y.; writing—review and editing, S.M. and K.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
The Nutritrack data collections and database are funded by a Health Research Council of New Zealand program grant (18/672). Leanne Young is funded by a Heart Foundation of New Zealand post-doctoral fellowship (1830).
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
Because of the commercial and legal restrictions to the use of copy-righted material, it is not possible to share data openly, but unredacted versions of the dataset are available with a licensed agreement that they will be restricted to non-commercial use. For access to Nutritrack, please contact the National Institute for Health Innovation at the University of Auckland at enquiries@nihi.auckland.ac.nz.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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