Nutrispeak

Vegan Myth-Busting Power Round

NoBullshit Vegan Podcast Episode 216 — Live Q&A Panel with Experts (dietitian, doctor, agrologist, fitness coach)

What happens when a doctor, a registered dietitian, an agrologist, and a fitness coach sit down to answer real audience questions? Find out in this episode. In this follow-up to our live No-B.S. Reset panel event, we tackle the questions we didn’t have time to answer on Zoom, covering everything from vegan nutrition myths to food system misconceptions.

You’ll hear evidence-based, practical answers to questions like:

What really helps with high blood pressure and low blood pressure, without jumping straight to pills?

Should I be concerned about eating too much soy? (Spoiler: no.)

How can people with IBS or sensitive guts thrive on a plant-based diet?

Are protein bars and powders helping, or just crowding out better options?

Is livestock necessary for soil health or food security?

Joining me are:

Dr. Jade Dittaro: lifestyle MD, hospitalist, and environmentalist.

Vesanto Melina: registered dietitian and award-winning co-author of 15 books.

Cory Davis: agrologist interested in the socio-environmental impact of food, an animal righ advocate, and co-author of Plant-Powered Protein.

We connect personal health, planetary health, and food system reality, without pretending there’s a single perfect answer for everyone.

Overview 

In this episode of the NoBullshit Vegan Podcast, host Karina Inkster gathers a power trio of expert guests: Dr. Jay Dittaro (lifestyle MD), Vesanto Melina (registered dietician), and Corey Davis (agrologist and author), for a follow‑up panel addressing unanswered questions from a recent live Zoom session. The discussion weaves together health, nutrition, agriculture, and planetary health through a strictly evidence‑based, no‑nonsense lens. The hosts and guests emphasize pragmatic, plant‑forward guidance for vegan audiences, while explicitly avoiding sponsorships to keep credibility intact. The show notes at nobullshitvegan.com/216 connect listeners with guest details and resources.

 

Key Themes & Takeaways

  • Omega‑3s and brain health: microalgae DHA/EPA sources are favored; recommended combined EPA/DHA intake typically stays around 500–1000 mg, avoiding excessive amounts. Omega‑3 status can be checked via OmegaQuant, a practical, low‑cost option.
  • Local vs. imported foods: environmental impact is driven by production practices, not merely geography. Plant foods generally have smaller footprints than animal products, regardless of origin, due to land and emissions considerations.
  • Regenerative grazing myths: regenerative grazing can improve certain soil and biodiversity metrics within livestock systems but does not resolve core land use or biodiversity challenges at current scales. Grass‑finished beef remains land‑intensive; replacement by livestock alone is not a panacea.
  • Hypertension and hypotension: lifestyle shifts (sleep, stress management, regular exercise) and dietary tweaks (less salt, more whole plant foods) are foundational. adjuncts like ground flax (2 Tbsp/day) and hibiscus tea (2 cups) show supportive evidence. Hydration, regular meals, and attention to elderly or high‑risk individuals are crucial.
  • Soy, IBS, and protein sources: soy is a high‑quality plant protein with minimal hormonal risk; for IBS, pea or soy isolates can bypass some FODMAP concerns. Gradual reintroduction, soaking/rinsing beans, and focusing on whole foods are emphasized over reliance on powders.
  • Soil health & livestock necessity: livestock are not universally required for soil health; context matters. Some ecosystems function with natural processes and biodiversity intact, while others may accommodate certain grazing practices, albeit with ecological trade‑
  • Special populations & chronic disease: plant‑forward strategies support heart health, diabetes management, and colorectal risk reduction when combined with regular surveillance and individualized care.
  • The group debates the accuracy of “regenerative grazing” as a sole climate fix and dissects real land‑use limitations, citing BC/AB dynamics and feedlots.
  • Practical, day‑to‑day tips are shared for athletes and IBS patients, including post‑exercise protein targets and feasible meal ideas (tempeh, lentils, quinoa, tofu, tahini) to reach 30 g of protein per meal.
  • The panel stresses that subsidies and policy shapes farming reality, urging listeners to consider economic context when debating plant‑based transitions.

 

Call‑to‑Action

  • Vote for the NoBullshit Vegan Podcast in the 2026 Veg News Veggie Awards at vegnews.com.
  • Access show notes and guest connections at nobullshitvegan.com/216.
  • Thanks to Corey Vesanto, Vesanto Molina, and Jade for a rigorous, informative, myth‑busting session.
  • The panel underscores their commitment to science‑driven, transparent discussions with long‑term vegan professionals, fostering a practical bridge between personal health, environmental stewardship, and ethical food systems.

 

Practical Tips

  • Omega‑3s: Moderate, not excessive, microalgae DHA/EPA preferred Target 500–1000 mg EPA+DHA daily; test with OmegaQuant if desired
  • Local vs. Imported: Production methods trump origin; favour plant foods; reduce animal product footprints
  • Regenerative grazing benefits exist, but not a universal fix
  • Support ecological farming: grow biodiversity alongside livestock
  • Hypertension / Hypotension, Lifestyle + diet synergy: sleep, stress work, water, fiber, flax, hibiscus tea
  • IBS & Protein Isolates can help, whole foods preferred; soak/rinse beans; reintroduce gradually; use soy/pea isolates carefully

 

 

Insights

A panel-style episode of No Bullshit Vegan where a dietitian, doctor, agrologist, and fitness coach answer audience questions on vegan nutrition, health, agriculture, and sustainability, debunking common myths with evidence and practical tips.

Panel included a dietitian, physician, agrologist, and fitness coach sharing evidence-based vegan health and environmental perspectives

  • Discusses omega-3 intake from microalgae and safe EPA/DHA levels
  • Debunks the idea that local food is always more sustainable than imported plant foods

Vegan Myth-Busting Power Round

Vegan Myth-Busting Power Round