Eat Beef, Glow Hard

Eat Beef, Glow Hard

The conversation about skin has tilted almost entirely toward what goes on it. Serums, acids, retinols, peels. Useful tools, often. But the question of what skin is actually built from, and where it sources those materials, has been left out of the picture for a long time. Skin is downstream of nutrition. The way it looks, ages, and recovers is the slower-moving result of what the body has to work with.

1. Skin runs on fat

Every cell membrane in the body, including those in skin, is built largely from lipids and cholesterol. Cholesterol regulates membrane fluidity, the property that keeps cells flexible rather than brittle. This isn't fringe biology, it's first-year biochemistry. Cells with poor membrane composition cope worse with everything skin has to deal with: temperature shifts, friction, sunlight, dryness, and the daily mechanical load of being on the outside of you.

Collagen sits in the same conversation. Collagen is a protein, not a fat, and the body builds it from amino acids using vitamin C as a cofactor. Beef supplies the structural amino acids glycine, proline, and lysine in complete form. Vitamin C comes from elsewhere on the plate. The broader point is that skin runs on a steady supply chain of structural inputs, and most modern diets are short on those and long on calories that don't carry their weight.

2. The sugar problem

The single best documented diet-and-skin link in the published literature is glycaemic load. When blood sugar spikes repeatedly, insulin and IGF-1 rise. That cascade drives sebum production and follicular changes, and controlled trials of low-glycaemic diets have shown measurable improvements in skin clarity. It's the most consistent finding in the field.

Around that, a wider mechanistic story is being mapped. β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB), the main ketone the body produces during low-carbohydrate eating, has been shown in cell and animal models to suppress the NLRP3 inflammasome, one of the central pathways of inflammatory cytokine release. Ketones also activate Nrf2, the body's primary antioxidant response. These are preclinical findings, not clinical prescriptions. They suggest that the systemic environment skin sits in, its inflammatory tone and oxidative load, is heavily shaped by what's eaten, not just what's applied.

3. Where beef fits

Beef is one of the densest dietary sources of the materials skin uses to rebuild itself. Complete protein, with all the essential amino acids in roughly the proportions human tissue is built from. B vitamins, zinc, iron, and the saturated and monounsaturated fats that make up most of human cell membranes. Zero carbohydrate, which means it doesn't drive insulin or glycaemic load.

Grass-fed beef differs from grain-finished beef in fatty acid profile: more omega-3, more conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), a tighter omega-6 to omega-3 ratio. The absolute amounts are modest. The directionality matters in a diet pattern that's already heavy on omega-6 from industrial seed oils.

This isn't a pitch for steak as skincare. It's an argument that the structural inputs to skin are nutritional, that beef happens to be one of the densest sources of those inputs, and that the conversation about skin would be more honest if it spent at least as much time on what's eaten as on what's applied.

4. The longer view

Topical products work on a six-week cycle. Diet works on a six-year one. The bottle and the plate aren't competing categories, they operate on different timescales, and the plate has been underweighted for a long time.

Skin built from good materials, in a body with stable metabolism and low inflammatory load, looks and behaves differently. Not because of any single food. Because of the slow, accumulated effect of giving the body what it's built to use.

 

SHOP ALL JERKY

 

References

Chylińska N, Maciejczyk M. Effects of the ketogenic diet on skin-potential benefits and risks. Front Nutr. 2025 Oct 16;12:1686056. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2025.1686056. PMID: 41178942; PMCID: PMC12571665.

 

 

Paoli, A., Rubini, A., Volek, J. S., & Grimaldi, K. A. (2013). Beyond weight loss: A review of the therapeutic uses of very-low-carbohydrate (ketogenic) diets. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 67(8), 789–796. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2013.116

 

 

Roster K, Xie L, Nguyen T, Lipner SR. Impact of Ketogenic and Low-Glycemic Diets on Inflammatory Skin Conditions. Cutis. 2024 Feb;113(2):75-80. doi: 10.12788/cutis.0942. PMID: 38593092.

 

 

Youm, Y. H., Nguyen, K. Y., Grant, R. W., Goldberg, E. L., Bodogai, M., Kim, D., D’Agostino, D., Planavsky, N., Lupfer, C., Kanneganti, T. D., Kang, S., Horvath, T. L., Fahmy, T. M., Crawford, P. A., Biragyn, A., & Dixit, V. D. (2015). The ketone metabolite β-hydroxybutyrate blocks NLRP3 inflammasome–mediated inflammatory disease. Nature Medicine, 21(3), 263–269. https://doi.org/10.1038/nm.3804

 

 

By Michelle Carillo


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