Gelatin
147 sourcesRay Peat promoted gelatin (and its parent protein, collagen) as a counterbalance to the excess muscle meat in modern diets. He noted that muscle meat is high in tryptophan and cysteine — amino acids that promote serotonin and suppress thyroid function — while gelatin is rich in glycine and proline, which have anti-inflammatory, liver-protective, and sleep-supportive properties.
Peat recommended incorporating gelatin or bone broth into the diet, noting that traditional cuisines naturally balanced muscle meat with connective tissue and organ meats. He suggested that glycine (the primary amino acid in gelatin) opposes the inflammatory effects of methionine and tryptophan, and that gelatin can improve sleep quality, reduce joint inflammation, and support healthy skin.
Key Positions
- Gelatin provides glycine and proline — anti-inflammatory amino acids largely absent from muscle meat
- Glycine opposes the effects of excess tryptophan (serotonin precursor) and methionine
- Supports liver detoxification and bile formation
- Improves sleep quality when taken before bed
- Reduces joint inflammation and supports connective tissue repair
- Traditional diets included gelatin-rich foods (bone broth, head cheese, organ meats)
- Commercial gelatin powder or bone broth can supplement a muscle-meat-heavy diet
Sources
147 items-
Calcium and Disease: Hypertension, organ calcification, & shock, vs. respiratory energy
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Cancer: Disorder and Energy
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Cascara, energy, cancer and the FDA's laxative abuse
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Cataracts: water, energy, light, and aging
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Diabetes, scleroderma, oils and hormones.
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El problema de la enfermedad de Alzheimer como una pista para la inmortalidad
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Energy, structure, and carbon dioxide: A realistic view of the organism
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Essays on nutrition, health, etc... - Vladimir Heiskanen (Valtsu)
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Estrogen - Age Stress Hormone.
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Fatigue, aging, and recuperation
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Fats, functions & malfunctions
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Gelatin, stress, longevity
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Glucose and sucrose for diabetes
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Glycemia, starch, and sugar in context
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Growth hormone: Hormone of Stress, Aging, and Death?
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Herb Doctors: Hot flashes, Night Sweats, the Relationship to Stress, Aging, PMS, Sugar Metabolism TRANSCRIPTION
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Herb Doctors: Serotonin, Endotoxins, Stress TRANSCRIPTION
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Hot flashes, energy, and aging
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I Choose Ice Cream - Geneviève
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Lactate vs. CO2 in wounds, sickness, and aging; the other approach to cancer
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Leakiness, aging, and cancer.
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Multiple sclerosis, protein, fats, and progesterone
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Nutrition by Nature - Kate Skinner
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Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science