Who are Pegans? What is a Pegan diet?
Vegan, keto, paleo, and Whole 30 diets are quite popular among the diet divas. But there’s a new genre of diet that’s been gaining popularity. Namely Pegan! This relatively new trend is a mix of paleo and vegan. Introduced in 2014 by blogger Mark Hyman, it was first found in his book, “Food: what the heck should I eat?”. It soon started trending in social media worldwide.
So what exactly is peganism? Pegan follows the principles of both vegan and paleo diets and is based on the notion that nutrient-rich, whole food can balance blood sugar, reduce inflammation and support optimal health. Compared to paleo and vegan diets, the pegan diet has fewer guidelines and restrictions.
What do you eat on a pegan diet?
Pegans focus largely (75 %) on fruit and vegetables, though meat, certain fish, legumes, nuts, and seeds are also allowed.
Pegan menus are not just limited to fruit and vegetables. Protein intake from animal sources is encouraged too. Here, there is less meat intake than a paleo diet, but more than that of a vegan routine. Pegans discourage conventionally-farmed meats or eggs and places emphasis on grass-fed, pasture-raised sources of beef, pork, poultry, and whole eggs.
In a pegan diet, only healthy fats from specific sources are allowed. These include nuts, seeds, avocado, olives, coconut and omega 3s. The pegan diet says “no” to most grains and legumes, with the exception of a few gluten-free a cross between paleo and vegan to you? whole grains and legumes. Grain intake should not exceed 125gm and legumes shouldn’t be more than 75 gms. Grains like black rice, quinoa, amaranth, millet, teff and oats are allowed and legumes like lentils, chickpeas, black beans, and pinto beans are encouraged.
Sounds like a cross between paleo and vegan to you?
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