Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Should You Take a Greens Supplement? Here Are the Facts
Episode Date: August 9, 2021In this podcast, I’m going to talk about greens supplements, which are more popular now than ever before. There’s no shortage of supplement companies out there promoting their greens powders with ...all sorts of marketing claims. It’s a winning formula, too. Your average greens supplement is just a bunch of dirt-cheap, fruit and vegetable powders, with pixie-dusted amounts of mushrooms or other extracts that sound nice. But how big of a difference do they really make? Greens supplements are often sold as a direct replacement for food, but can you really just take a greens supplement instead of eating fruit and vegetables every day? Should you consider taking a greens supplement if you already eat healthily? In this podcast, I’m going to answer those questions, as well as share my favorite greens supplements ingredients, and the worst ones. All of this should help you make better decisions when purchasing a greens supplement. Timestamps: 4:14 - What ingredients are commonly found in greens supplements? 5:16 - What are superfoods? 7:53 - How are greens supplements sold? 11:57 - How many servings of fruit and vegetables should you eat? 16:22 - Should you drink fruit and vegetable powders? 21:03 - The best greens supplements ingredients. 24:57 - What are the benefits of cruciferous vegetables? 27:28 - The worst greens supplements. Mentioned on the Show: Books by Mike Matthews: https://legionathletics.com/products/books/ Genesis Greens Supplement: https://legionathletics.com/products/supplements/genesis-superfood-supplement/
Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, your host. Thank you for joining me
today. And real quickly before we get started, if you like what I'm doing on the show and you
want to help me do better, and if you also want to never miss a new episode, make sure to subscribe
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All right. So in this episode, I'm going to be talking about greens supplements, which are more
popular now than ever before. There are quite a few big supplement companies out there that sell
only greens supplements or that heavily promote their greens supplements use them as tops of funnel type products so to speak
you know loss leaders or even gain leaders if the costs are low and the costs are usually pretty low
with these supplements because your average greens supplement is really just a bunch of
fruit and vegetable powders which are dirt cheap and then maybe a bunch of fruit and vegetable powders, which are dirt cheap. And then maybe
a couple of fancy sounding mushrooms thrown in there. Don't look at the amounts. Often
they're hidden anyway behind proprietary blends, but even if they're not, usually very small
amounts of plant extracts, mushrooms, and other things that sound nice, but how big of a difference do they really
make? And can you just take a greens supplement instead of eating your fruits and vegetables like
you should? And that's often how these supplements are sold. They're often sold as a direct replacement
for food. They're often sold as something that can reduce bloating. That's a
big one that is promoted to women in particular who I guess generally want to have as flat of a
stomach as possible. I suppose the same goes for us fitness guys. Nobody likes to feel bloated,
but when I've looked at the marketing of greens supplements, a lot of it seems to target women, and this is one of the big points
to beat bloat. So I'm going to be talking about those things in this episode. I'm going to be
talking about whether you should even consider taking a greens supplement if you do eat your
fruits and vegetables every day, or at least most days of the week, like you should. And I'm also
going to be sharing a few of my favorite ingredients for greens
supplements, as well as a few of the worst ingredients for greens supplements, which
should help you make better decisions when considering purchasing a greens supplement.
Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my
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All right, let's get started. So I mentioned in the intro that your average greens supplement
is some fruit powder, some vegetable powder, maybe some algae, maybe some chlorella, spirulina. Not often and
not often in large amounts because spirulina in particular is actually kind of expensive,
but sometimes you'll see those in a greens supplement. Sometimes they have mushrooms
like reishi or turkey tail, again, often severely underdosed. Probiotics are popular simply because many people
believe that taking probiotics of any kind is good, and that is not the case. Some probiotic
strains have been shown to benefit people with healthy guts. In most cases, from what I'm aware
of, the evidence is limited but promising. Many strains, though,
do not. They can benefit people who are having problems, digestive problems, gastrointestinal
problems, but not people who don't have any of those problems. And green supplements often have
other quote-unquote superfoods, which is a term I don't like and is generally a red flag. If a company sells a product
as a superfood product or sells a product as containing quote-unquote superfoods,
you should be skeptical because there are no superfoods. There are no miracle, quick fix,
magic bullet foods that can help you beat bloat or lose weight or
dramatically increase your health or decrease your risk of disease and dysfunction.
That said, there are foods that are more nutritious than others, that are more uniquely
nutritious than others, meaning they contain unique molecules that you don't find in many
other nutritious foods that have significant benefits.
For example, the anthocyanins, which are responsible for pigmentation, for coloring
in certain fruits, they're most abundant in berries. So elderberries, blueberries, strawberries,
but you'll also find them in cherries, eggplants, black plums, and other fruits and other plant foods.
And the beta-glucans, which are a type of soluble fiber in oatmeal and others.
And I have spoken and written about these uniquely beneficial foods.
If you want to call them superfoods, that's okay, but they have to be understood as just, again, foods that are generally nutritious and have
very specific molecules that are not present in many other types of nutritious foods that can have
significant benefits when eaten at normal amounts. So I've written and spoken about those foods
in my book, Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, for example, in the diet section. And because that book is intended
for intermediate and advanced weightlifters, I'm assuming, and I make it clear in the book that
I'm going to assume that the person reading has read Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, or at least
understands the principles taught in Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, understands energy balance,
macronutrient balance, understands
the fundamentals of good dieting, because in Beyond Bigger, Leaner, Stronger, now we're going
to get into more fine-tuning your diet, more fine-grained optimizations that are not necessary,
but that can help you get a bit more out of the dietary regimen that you're following.
Like if you're already doing a good job eating a bunch
of nutritious foods, why not consider being a little bit more specific with those foods to get
even more benefits, right? So anyway, coming back to greens supplements, most of these products
are sold by just connecting the dots between the general awareness that we should be eating a few servings of vegetables
every day, a couple servings of fruit every day. And many people don't do that. Even many people
who work out regularly and eat fairly well. And so the supplement marketer, the green supplement
marketer would say, you could just drink a glass of this every day instead. It's delicious. And it has
these other things. Don't really look into it, but it has some probiotics and, you know, probiotics,
obviously. Some mushrooms. Haven't you heard Tim Ferriss talk about the power of mushrooms? Yeah,
yeah. Mushrooms, mushrooms. There's this other green stuff in here, chlorella,
super powerful antioxidant, and it's green. So, I mean, duh, green.
Unfortunately, though, it is not scientifically sound to draw a correlation between the research
that shows that people who eat more fruits and vegetables on average than people who eat less
live longer, right? There's good evidence for that. And the research that shows more mechanistically
all the good things that happen in our bodies
when we eat fruits and vegetables and whole grains
and seeds and legumes and even lean protein, right?
All of these nutritious foods,
they cause very specific reactions in the body
that are beneficial.
And scientists have isolated a lot of these processes and know specifically why, for example,
we should eat a serving or two of dark leafy greens every day.
That's an example of optimizing vegetable intake because vegetable intake could be like my kids who they will eat peas,
they will eat broccoli, they will eat cauliflower sometimes, they will eat cooked spinach sometimes,
and they'll eat corn, which is a grain, I know, but I mix it with the peas.
Mostly, I can get them to eat broccoli and peas and corn mixed up. And that's
better than not eating any vegetables at all. I have no problem with that. And I have no reason
to try to force them to eat a wide variety of vegetables. But for those of us who are a little
bit more mature and have a little bit more executive function to bring to bear on our diet,
it is smart to eat a variety of vegetables,
eat the rainbow as our mothers probably told us, as well as a variety of fruits.
Eating a variety of whole grains is probably less important. My go-to for example is oatmeal. I'll
have a half a cup to a cup dry and then I'll cook it as my final meal, usually around 9 or 9.30.
I'll put some walnuts in there for my last dose of
healthy fat. And I will mix in a scoop of protein powder Legion way, of course. And these days it's
cinnamon cereal, but I'll try different flavors. I just kind of rotate through every month or so
pick another one. And I've tried our plant protein plant plus in oatmeal as well. But I like the whey the most. I haven't tried
casein yet, but anyway, that's my final meal of the day. That is my serving or two servings,
a half a cup dry is a serving of whole grains. So if I have a full cup, that's two servings of
whole grains. And I don't see any reason to, at least from a health or wellness or performance or
any sort of beneficial context, I don't see a reason to mix that up in the same way that,
or to combine, like to have some oatmeal with maybe some barley or quinoa or something else
like that. Again, I don't know of any health-based reason to do that. Oatmeal
gets the job done, gets me my whole grains in, and has some unique properties that you don't find
in other grains. Now, vegetables, on the other hand, there is a benefit to eating a variety of
vegetables. Now, I mentioned that high intake of fruits and vegetables, So let's say three to five plus servings of vegetables per day
and probably one to three plus servings of fruit per day. As general advice, I would say shoot for
around four to five servings of vegetables per day, a serving being a fist of cooked or raw.
It doesn't really matter in most cases. It's about the same in terms of volume. So a fist's worth of vegetables is a serving, about a fist's worth of fruit is a serving. Of course, it changes
a little bit in the case of like a banana, one medium-sized banana is a serving. And so good
general rule is two, maybe three servings of fruit per day, four, five or so servings of vegetables per day. And if you do that, research shows that over time,
your risk of disease and dysfunction will go down. Now, of course, the rest of your lifestyle
matters. You can't sleep poorly, drink a bunch of alcohol, smoke cigarettes, be overweight,
be sedentary, and offset all of that with just eating your fruits and vegetables.
But it is a major contributive factor to longevity, as is regular exercise, sleeping well,
not drinking too much alcohol, not smoking cigarettes, maintaining a healthy body weight
and body composition. Now, what is not established in the scientific literature is a correlation between greens supplements, powdered fruits and vegetables, and longevity.
Many supplement marketers offer that research as proof of why you are going to live longer if you just drink their greens slop every day.
But that is, again, that is not scientifically sound. Those things do
not necessarily follow because, for example, when you're drinking a greens supplement, you're not
getting the fiber that you would normally get in the vegetables. And we know that fiber is a very
important nutrient, especially soluble fiber. We know that that is food for our
gut, for our microbiome. The beneficial bacteria that live in our gut, they feed off of that
soluble fiber. And then when they gobble it up, they produce, they poop out, they produce these
short chain fatty acids that bring down inflammation levels in the body and cause
other positive things to happen. And so if you're drinking dehydrated vegetables and fruits,
you're not getting that soluble fiber. And it's unknown how much the soluble fiber is contributing
to the overall effect of the fruits and vegetables that we're eating, the positive benefits that have been
seen in research. The soluble fiber may be a major component of that. It may be just as important as
the vitamins and minerals and other nutrients. And to that point, there are other nutritional
changes that occur when fruits and vegetables are processed into powders and put into these greens supplements.
For example, scientists know that when you eat a whole piece of fruit, you're getting,
let's take oranges, right? You're getting the natural vitamin C, but you're also getting
what are called cofactors, other nutrients that help your body better use the vitamin C and have
other effects in the body. And if you take a
vitamin C pill, even a natural vitamin C pill, not ascorbic acid, which is the synthetic version,
you are not necessarily going to get all of those cofactors. And therefore you are not necessarily
going to see the same benefits as if you just ate an orange. Now that isn't to say that you
shouldn't take vitamin C pills or that ascorbic
acid in particular is bad or doesn't work. No, not at all. If we're just looking at the vitamin C
molecule, research shows that ascorbic acid causes really the same reactions at a cellular level in
the body. So it is effective for what it is. But again, if you eat the orange, you are getting additional nutritional components
that scientists are not quite sure as to the importance or overall effects of. And so,
generally speaking, we want to eat nutritious foods, not supplement them. And so then that is my primary criticism of many greens supplements
and how they're sold. If people are eating well, they just don't need to drink fruit and vegetable
powders and they are not going to get any significant benefits from tiny pixie dusted
amounts of probiotics or probiotic strains that really have no place in a supplement for people
with healthy guts. And then the same logic applies or the same rationale applies to
mushrooms and herbs and other plant extracts, which actually may be good ingredients if they're
included at clinically effective doses, which they're often not because
that gets really expensive with the more scientifically validated ingredients.
Now, that said, I'm not just anti-greens supplement in the way that I am just anti-testosterone
booster, for example.
There just are no natural substances that make a meaningful difference over the long-term period. If that changes one day, I will change my position.
I am anti-BCAAs because for those of us who eat enough protein, there is no reason to take them.
I am anti-collagen protein because it's just trash to your protein. And if you're taking it to try to
look prettier, hair, skin, nails, and if you're actually seeing benefits, it's probably because of the glycine content in collagen protein.
That's an amino acid that is cheap.
You can buy it in bulk.
It is naturally sweet.
You can just mix it with water, do three to five grams at night.
It may also help your sleep and skip the collagen protein.
You'll save a lot of money that way.
So I am currently just against those supplement categories.
Those are supplements that I will never sell for any reason until maybe things change in
terms of peer-reviewed scientific research that would support meaningful claims that
could be used to actually persuade people to buy them.
But the greens supplement is not in the same bucket for me because it can be done differently.
You don't have to just create a cheap and relatively useless blend of fruit and vegetable powders.
You could just take a multivitamin instead of drinking one
of those supplements. Instead, what you can do is you can collect up cool stuff that you want to put
in your body and it can look green because of something like chlorella or spirulina. And I'm
going to talk about those ingredients. And those are ingredients that you're not going to get
through food alone. You're not going to be eating spirulina or chlorella.
They don't taste good at all in anything.
They really just need to be supplemented.
So you could have a base of a green supplement, a green substance like spirulina, and then
you can add other stuff in there that may or may not be green actually, but can have similar beneficial effects
where there's a theme of the benefits of such a supplement. It would be heavily weighted toward
health, improving health, reducing risk of disease and dysfunction. But if it's well-formulated,
there could be some performance stuff in there as well, physical and mental and cognitive performance enhancement.
And that could be a supplement worth taking.
It would not be essential.
It would not be as important as a good multivitamin, for example.
And that's not essential, but it is highly recommended even if you eat well, because
it's hard to get enough of certain key nutrients,
even when you eat well, look at vitamin D and vitamin K, for example, look at zinc and B12.
If you don't eat much meat, it's hard to do. It's very easy to do with a good supplement and a good
multivitamin supplement that is, and a good multivitamin supplement can just act as a,
as a bit of an insurance policy, right? It
can help plug these little small nutritional holes that actually may have a disproportionately
large negative effect in how you feel and how you perform. Look at what happens when you are
deficient in or just insufficient in vitamin K and vitamin D. So again, a greens supplement, I would rank it below a
multivitamin, but a good greens supplement would be worth taking for the same reason that a good
multivitamin is worth taking, but it would be even more optional. It would be for people who just
want to get a bit more out of their supplementation regimen. So with that context, let's talk about
a few of my favorite greens supplement ingredients. The first one is spirulina,
and this is a blue-green algae that has a long history of safe use. And that's a bit odd because
blue-green algae normally would, it would kill you actually in a painful way. There are toxins
in many blue-green allergies called microcystins that are just not in spirulina and therefore
we can take it and it can benefit our health and our performance in many different ways.
One of the very cool things about spirulina, studies show that supplementing
with it can improve our cholesterol profile. It can increase muscle endurance. It can increase
strength. It can alleviate or even eliminate nasal symptoms caused by allergies. I've noticed that
because I'm in Florida, back in Florida, and there are a lot of oak trees around. And I've always had,
when I was younger, I had a pretty annoying allergic reaction to oak pollen. My eyes would
itch all day and I would sneeze and it would last like a week or two and go away. And I didn't
discover antihistamines until later. I don't know why. So I just kind of suffered through it every
year as a teenager. Now it's not that bad. I'll get some itchiness in my eyes and maybe some sneezing here and there. And so what I'll notice is when I take
spirulina every day, which I do because I take my own greens supplement, I take Legion's Genesis
every day and it has spirulina in it, I get less of an allergic reaction to the oak pollen.
It doesn't get rid of it altogether. and usually when the oak pollen is peaking i'll take
an antihistamine and that gets rid of the symptoms altogether of course and it lasts longer than 24
hours for me which is cool i take one every couple of days for a week or so again when the oak pollen
is at its worst and that's the end of it so anyway coming, coming back to spirulina, studies show that it can reduce
muscle damage caused by exercise. It can help the body eliminate heavy metals. It can lower
blood pressure. It can help protect liver health. It can reduce systemic inflammation. It can
improve insulin sensitivity, and it can help improve immunity. And what's even more surprising
than all of the benefits that
I just laid out is scientists are finding new ones. I mentioned spirulina can boost strength.
That's based on research that was published last year in 2020. So as research on spirulina
continues, I will not be surprised to be adding to the rather long list of the cool things that it can do for
you. Okay, let's move on to the next ingredient that is a green flag in greens supplements,
and that is chlorella, which is a green algae that, similar to spirulina, has quite a few
nutrients. And because of its high chlorophyll content, there's evidence that can help remove
some toxins from the body like dioxins and HCAs. But unlike spirulina, there doesn't appear to be
anything particularly unique about chlorella. It just is high in nutrients, including magnesium.
It's generally high in chlorophyll and it has a high protein content compared to other vegetable powders.
But unlike spirulina, it doesn't have a known unique bioactive component, but that's not a reason to not take it or not include it in a greens supplement. If you are a formulator,
there definitely are times where you are going after plants that have very unique
properties.
And then there are times that you just want to plop something in
because it is a good source of certain vitamins or minerals or other nutrients.
And chlorella is in the latter camp.
Okay, next on my list of ingredients that I like to see in greens supplements,
cruciferous vegetables.
Now, of course, this means powdered cruciferous vegetables. And so this comes with the caveat that I'm not saying
that you don't need to eat the cruciferous vegetables if you just drink the powdered
version of them. But powdered cruciferous vegetables, I do think, have a place in a
well-formulated greens supplement. Now, what are cruciferous vegetables? Well, they are simply a
group of plants that include broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, bok choy, arugula, brussel sprouts,
collards, watercress, radishes. Those are the most common dietary forms of cruciferous vegetables,
the stuff that we actually eat. Most people think of
the entire group as just broccoli and yes, broccoli is healthy, but you can eat other
cruciferous vegetables as well. I like to rotate between broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels
sprouts. And then I have some arugula in a salad every day at lunch, but at dinner, I'm either
eating, I mean, I'm eating a variety, a medley of vegetables,
but there's always something cruciferous in there.
Now, as for why I like to see powdered cruciferous vegetables in greens supplements, it's not
for the healthy stuff like magnesium and vitamin C.
Also, cruciferous vegetables are a good source of soluble fiber, but of course you're
not getting that soluble fiber if it's just a powder. We're going after specific compounds too,
sulforaphane and isothiocyanates. And these substances positively interact with our body's
natural antioxidant defenses and detoxification processes. So by putting these things in our body,
and detoxification processes. So by putting these things in our body, those systems just work better. And what that means then is our body is just better at eliminating toxins and other
foreign compounds, and that can reduce the risk of disease and dysfunction over time. For example,
there appears to be a link between high sulforaphane intake and lower risk of cancer.
Okay, so those are three of my favorite greens supplement themed ingredients. Ingredients that
you will sometimes see in a higher quality greens supplement. Sometimes not all three,
because that may or may not make sense given the exact formulation. But one I always like to see,
for example, is spirulina. But anyway, let's talk about a few ingredients that you'll often find
in greens supplements that I am not so hot on. The first one is hemp and anything that is remotely related to marijuana is popular these days. And so hemp is now a protein supplement.
It is sold as a food replacement. It is sold as a nutritional powerhouse. And yeah, it does have
nutrients. It does have protein, but there are no cannabinoids. So if you're looking for the additional benefits that
may be associated with cannabinoids, the ones that don't make you high, you're not going to
get those in hemp. And there's nothing particularly special about hemp's nutritional profile.
It is usually 30 to 50% protein by weight. So it's not a great protein supplement. It'd be more like a meal
replacement supplement and it's cheap. So if you're looking for a cheap meal replacement,
a little bit of protein, some carbs and fat and some, some nutrients, I guess it's okay.
But I think there are better options for that. I would rather just have you eat food, honestly.
for that. I would rather just have you eat food, honestly. Okay, so next on the no-no list,
non-dark leafy greens. So lettuce, right? Have you ever heard somebody say,
lettuce is just crunchy water? It's kind of true if you look at the nutrition label.
When it comes to micronutrition, a lot of the lighter colored leafies, they just don't have much to offer.
They don't have much in the way of nutrients. So for example, lettuce, just plain old lettuce,
Swiss chard, endive, basil. Yeah, these things have some nitrates and that's good for circulation, but the amount of nitrates in them can vary from food to food. And even with one type of food,
it can vary based on how it was grown and
how it was processed and nitrates are in every single vegetable. So you don't need to add the
lettuce to get the nitrates. If you are also eating other vegetables. Um, and these types of
non-dark leafy greens are usually just fillers. They provide very little in the way of nutrition and they have nothing
unique. They don't have the isothiocyanates. They don't have the sulforaphane. They really have no
place in a good greens supplement. If a greens supplement that you are taking or considering
buying has lettuce in it, I would say anywhere, but certainly if it's one of the major players, if it's high up
in the ingredients list or in the ingredients list of a proprietary blend, I would say if it
has a proprietary blend, just don't buy it at all. But if lettuce is prominently in there,
just pick something else. And the last common ingredient in greens supplements that is just
completely underwhelming is carrot. Yes, it is a great
source of pro vitamin A or beta carotene, and it's delicious in stews. It's versatile. I eat
carrots every day. I put it in my vegetable slop, as I call it, that I make for dinner,
which has onion and garlic and a cruciferous vegetable and carrot. And what else do I put
in there? It's a whole pile of things, green beans,
and usually some cauliflower, some rice cauliflower, in addition to the cruciferous
veggie that I'm going to cut up like a Brussels sprout or a broccoli. I could go frozen on the
broccoli and Brussels sprout, but I prefer fresh for those. I put in some peppers, all kinds of things, right?
And carrot goes in there. But again, beyond the pro vitamin A and adding a bit of bulk and some taste, it doesn't really have anything special to offer. There is a bit of scientific research
on carrots, which yes, as they are just not that interesting. And I'm guessing that they're included in a lot
of greens supplement because sometimes people think of them as a superfood. So there's a bit
of marketing puffery there. And they're also very, very cheap. They add a bit of bulk.
And if they're processed correctly, they can add a good taste. They can add a bit of sweetness.
add a good taste. They can add a bit of sweetness. And that's it, really. So when you see carrot or carrot extract or carrot juice as an ingredient, of course, it'd be a powder in a greens supplement.
Your spidey sense should start tingling. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you found it
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