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Food

Is soya the food it’s cracked up to be?

January 21, 2010 14:19
Soya
3 min read

The value of increasing soya in Western diets has been much debated. Is it healthy or harmful? It has its detractors, but this is a healthy food with some interesting qualities.

Soya is part of the legume family that includes peas, other beans and lentils. Soya has a good nutritional profile: it is low in saturated fat, is a good source of polyunsaturated fats (especially the heart healthy omega-3 fatty acids), and contains high-quality vegetable protein (similar in quality to meat and milk protein), fibre, various vitamins and minerals. Hence soya fits in well with general healthy eating guidelines and has now been included as a protein in the Eatwell Plate, the national public health teaching model for healthy eating. Soya is useful as a staple of the vegetarian diet since it contains some iron, zinc and calcium.

Foods containing soya include soya milk, yoghurts and desserts, tofu, miso, tempeh, natto, edamame (young soya beans), soya beans, soya nuts (roasted soya beans), soya mince and various meat alternatives such as veggie burgers and sausages.

There is little evidence to suggest that fermented soya foods (miso, tempeh and natto) are significantly superior to unfermented ones (tofu, soya milk, soya beans, soya nuts).