Meat is often blamed for creeping weight gain; for many women, the opposite is physiologically more likely. When high-quality meat raises protein intake to about one and a half to two grams per kilogram of body weight, skeletal muscle protein synthesis rises, resting energy expenditure holds steady, and lean mass is less vulnerable during calorie restriction.
Stronger still is the appetite effect. Higher protein meals from lean beef, poultry or game lower ghrelin, increase peptide YY and GLP‑1, and slow gastric emptying, so hunger drops while total daily calories often fall without deliberate restraint or snack policing. Fat gain risk climbs instead when meat comes bundled with refined starch, seed oils and liquid calories, not when protein density is high and plate composition is controlled.
Most striking is how meat can protect metabolic rate across the menstrual cycle and into midlife. By anchoring each meal around a defined protein target, women tend to keep fat-free mass and insulin sensitivity higher, which improves nutrient partitioning toward glycogen and muscle repair rather than adipose storage, leaving scale weight steadier and waistlines tighter than low-protein dieting ever manages.