Red meat has long played a leading role in diets across the Western world, but a growing body of evidence associates eating too much of it with increasing health risks. Now, a large-scale study has linked red and processed meat directly to an increased risk of heart disease. Here’s how to reduce the amount you eat, one cold cut at a time…

Vegan replacement food

Vegan meat has plotted a similar path to alcohol-free beer, and has finally broken into the mainstream, thanks to changing habits and a marked uptick in quality. It took both substitutes a while to find their feet, and there was a time relatively recently when neither were given much truck by the world’s carnivores and beer-lovers.

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But over the last couple of years, brands in both camps have finally nailed authentic taste, and now both industries are booming. Beyond Meat burgers frequent restaurant menus, Gosh meat-free sausages are common in supermarket aisles, and Tofurky-stuffed sandwiches populate plenty of picnics.

They honestly do taste very similar. They didn’t used to, but they do now.

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Beyond Meat (@beyondmeat)

 

 

Use traditional veggie options

Veggie burgers existed long before the recent vegan explosion, and meatless meals have long relied on similar-ish foodstuffs like soya and mycoprotein. Quorn has been flooding the mid-week market since the 1980s (we’re fairly sure not everyone knows it’s a brand, not a food), with brown, proteinous products that don’t really mimic meat, but fill in for it well anyway.

Or you could always have a salad.

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by Quorn UK (@quorn_uk)

Eat more chicken

Almost anything red meat can do, chicken can do better, or at least nearly as well. Chicken burgers fill out a bun just as well as anything cow-sourced, and chicken breasts look just as good smoked or grilled as cuts of pork or beef.

We won’t lie to you, we’re yet to be fully convinced by chicken chipolatas, and though chicken bacon does exist, it’s not a patch on a plateful of crispy streaky. You didn’t think it would be that easy, did you?

Eat fewer (or different) takeaways

A man preparing a meal without red meat
(Alamy/PA)

Compared to how much it features in home cooking, red meat is massively overrepresented in the takeaway market. Burger joints dot every high street, steak is standard at the slightly higher end, and sausage and chips make up the bulk of most pub menus.

It is highly likely that if you started home cooking more, the amount of red meat in your diet would drop almost by accident. Your bank account would thank you too. Win-win.

Have a red meat-free barbie

Barbecues are a staple of the summer, and red meat is a staple of most barbecues, in part because of how it sizzles and changes colour on the grill. Chicken thighs, turkey escalopes, stuffed peppers, halloumi slices, sweet potato skewers, charred aubergines, corn on the cob… ignore the propaganda, you can easily barbie without beef.

Anything is better than nothing

A cooked piece of red meat
(Alamy/PA)

Moderation seems somewhat out of fashion these days. You don’t have to sell your house and live on an allotment to help fight climate change, and you don’t need to banish red meat from your kitchen altogether to help your health.

Even just a little bit less is a good start, and there’s certainly nothing wrong with treating yourself. Slashing your bi-monthly trip to your favourite steak restaurant is low priority compared to what you eat in between.

Pick one thing to drop first

Pork sausages, beef burgers, lamb chops. Bin your least favourite, and you’re a third of the way there already. Or you could erase one type of meat, such as heavily processed products that might also be bad for you in other ways.

Best-selling plant based cookbooks

Stuck for inspiration? Check out our list of best-selling Amazon products!

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