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Home Blogs Ask a Vegan! Eating Vegan: Where do You Get Your Protein?

Eating Vegan: Where do You Get Your Protein? Print E-mail
Written by Becky Striepe   
Friday, 12 February 2010 09:54

spilling-the-beansSecond only to “I would die without cheese!”, folks ask all the time about where vegans get their protein. For someone accustomed to centering their dinner plate around a piece of animal protein, I can see how this might seem like a problem. You take that steak off of your plate, and you’re basically living on salad and potatoes.

Not that I’m knocking salads or potatoes. In fact, baked potatoes do contain a little bit of protein!

 

But really, where do you get protein when it’s not coming from animal products? The short answer is: lots of places! Here are some common vegan staples and their protein contents:

  • beans - 7-10 grams per half cup (cooked)
  • tofu - 2.3 grams per half ounce
  • peanut butter - 8 grams per 2 Tablespoons
  • almonds - 8 grams per 1/4 cup
  • peanuts - 9 grams per 1/4 cup
  • cashews - 5 grams per 1/4 cup
  • flax seeds – 8 grams per 1/4 cup
  • brown rice - 3 grams per 4 ounces
  • quinoa - 4.5 grams per 1/2 cup
  • baked potato - 2.5 grams
  • cooked broccoli - 7 grams per half cup
  • peas - 8 grams per half cup
  • corn - 5 grams per 1 cup

Really, the question is, where don’t vegans get protein? The recommended daily value for protein is about 50 grams for a 2000 calorie diet, which you could easily hit by combining a couple of protein sources per meal: beans and rice, whole grain cereal in soy or nut milk, or broccoli and whole wheat pasta.

 

So, spill the beans, my vegan friends! What’s your favorite protein source?

 

Source: Eat.Drink.Better.

 

The thoughts, views or opinions expressed in these blogs are those of the blogger, and do not necessarily represent those of Four Green Steps or its staff.