Why yeast extract, a common food ingredient (also labeled as hydrolyzed or autolyzed yeast) can trigger symptoms for those sensitive to glutamate or MSG.
Chances are, if you glance through your pantry, you will find numerous foods that contain yeast extract. This ingredient is particularly prevalent in crackers and other carb-based food with a savory flavor.
Given the positive reputation of nutritional yeast and the widespread use of baker’s yeast in bread and pastries, most people never give this ubiquitous additive a second thought.
But what is hydrolyzed or autolyzed yeast extract really? Is it a friend or foe in the diet? To get to that answer, we must start at the very beginning, with the wiring of our biology to enjoy, even crave, the taste of glutamate.
Why We Love Glutamate
As a child, I remember our family holiday get-togethers. Platters of plates of food-filled every nook, cranny, and corner of my grandmother’s house.
The meal would last for hours, often well into the evening and even the next day! But one food never made it that long. Grandma’s Swedish Meatballs were always gone in a flash.
Perfectly formed, oven browned, then dropped into a crockpot to slow simmer for days on end. The family all fought over these as if they were manna straight from heaven!
But what made this one food so sought after among the dozens of others? What made little balls of meat irresistible to our bodies and brains? Part of it was the presence of natural glutamates.
The term “glutamates” refers to the many forms of glutamic acid. It is an amino acid (a building block of protein) found naturally in many foods and in our bodies.
What makes glutamates so powerful?
Glutamates, like sugar and salt, but to a higher degree, trigger a response in our brains that make us enjoy our food. This response is not necessarily bad, as a wide variety of foods and traditional dishes contain glutamates.
Some of these dishes contain them at high concentrations. Aged cheese, fermented vegetables, cured meats, slow-simmered stocks, and soy sauce all contain glutamate.
Glutamates don’t just taste good, they ARE good. It is an abundant neurotransmitter in the brain and is not only beneficial but essential for life itself.
In 1908, a scientist finally discovered that it is glutamates that form the fifth taste, called “umami,” that we love in so many traditional foods. But like many natural things, commercial interests tend to want to “improve” upon them.
The reason? To essentially make cheap food taste high quality. The result? Monosodium glutamate (MSG) a highly concentrated, synthetically produced, and ultra-potent form of glutamic acid, was born.
When public opinion turned against MSG starting in the 1960s (baby food used to contain it!), food manufacturers sought more natural alternatives.
This spawned the MSG industry with dozens of confusing names and slightly altered forms that still imparted the same flavors and sensations but without the same stigma and side effects.
And that brings us to yeast extract, also called hydrolyzed yeast or autolyzed yeast.
What is Yeast Extract?
The direct answer to the question of whether yeast extract is actually just MSG, google notwithstanding, is a resounding no.
I know I am going against a lot of wellness and health blogs on this one. But this is the reality of this much-maligned and misunderstood food additive.
Sorry friends, but yeast extract ISN’T MSG.
Now, this is not to say that autolyzed yeast extract (aka hydrolyzed yeast) is good or bad for you.
The point is that these are completely different things, made in completely different ways. Most importantly, they deliver very different forms and concentrations of glutamates.
Yeast extract contains glutamates, just like the natural glutamate in bone broth and aged cheeses. However, it also contains other compounds that contribute to its unique flavor.
MSG, on the other hand, is a highly concentrated, synthetic, and processed form of glutamic acid. It is currently made by bacterial fermentation, and nothing else.
The issues with the safety and side effects of MSG are well known including obesity and headaches among others. (2)
(Hydrolyzed) Autolyzed Yeast Extract is NOT MSG
But yeast extract isn’t MSG, just like moonlight isn’t sunlight. It contains sunlight but is a very different light. Whole Foods, while not a good authority on some topics such as canola oil, has an excellent article on hydrolyzed yeast (extract). It identifies the differences from MSG in very clear language.
The term “glutamate” refers to a number of forms of glutamic acid, an amino acid found naturally in many foods (and in our bodies). Cheese, milk, meat, peas, seaweed and mushrooms are a few of the foods containing the highest levels of natural glutamate, and this substance is largely responsible for the phenomenon of umami, the “fifth taste” of savory, meaty foods. In fact, the discovery of the link between glutamates and savory flavors led the Japanese food scientist Kikunae Ikeda in 1908 to the commercial development of monosodium glutamate. MSG is a synthetically derived and highly concentrated flavor enhancer that is almost completely made up of glutamates. It’s so powerful that just a few drops can drastically change the flavor of a dish.
As the 60 Minutes story exposed, it’s also so powerfully concentrated that it can cause severe reactions in people who are hypersensitive to it. While the scientific basis of the set of symptoms known as “Chinese Restaurant Syndrome” has been debated and doubted by many, the phenomenon has caused a lot of people to carefully and diligently avoid MSG. A number of consumer groups have claimed that certain food ingredients, such as autolyzed yeast and hydrolyzed protein, are MSG in disguise. They are not. Autolyzed yeast and hydrolyzed proteins, among other ingredients, are completely natural ingredients that happen to be have substantial amounts of glutamates, but nowhere near the concentration found in MSG. (2)
Glutamate vs MSG
So, what does this mean? Some individuals are sensitive to both MSG and various yeast extracts. But many people who are sensitive to MSG are not sensitive to yeast and other forms of glutamates.
Why? Should we even be worried about glutamates, to begin with? Industry (of course) says no, but the issue is more complicated than that.
As mentioned above, glutamates are naturally occurring in a wide range of foods, especially if fermented or slowly cooked, or simmered.
Also, traditional cultures sometimes prepared foods in such a way to purposefully INCREASE the concentration of glutamates. Clearly, ancestral societies recognized the benefits of natural glutamate in the diet.
Risks of Too Much Glutamate
However, the widespread presence of MSG in processed foods allows us to unnaturally INCREASE the amount of glutamate (both synthetic and natural) we can consume at one time.
In other words, processed foods containing MSG permit us to get addicted and/or “overdose” for lack of a better word.
There are a few risks with this increase. One, as Stephan Guyenet discusses in his book, The Hungry Brain, is that such high reward foods can short circuit our brain’s appetite and body weight regulatory systems.
Dr. Russell Blaylock MD talks about this in his book Excitotoxins. MSG kills brain cells, most notably in the hypothalamus located in the brain stem. The hypothalamus is a significant player in the overall control of metabolism and the endocrine system.
But lots of foods can do that, many of which don’t contain any glutamates. Second, some people are sensitive to glutamates, even if they are not sensitive to MSG.
Glutamate-sensitive individuals can react badly to a wide range of foods, such as strong aged cheeses, long-simmered homemade stocks, and foods that contain yeast extracts.
This inherent sensitivity, particularly for those with leaky gut, is why the GAPS Diet includes only briefly cooked meat stocks for a period of time until some healing has occurred.
What to Do if you are Sensitive
Besides gut imbalance, why else would a person be sensitive to glutamates? Genetics appears to play a large role as well. Some of us are better at handling glutamates than others, just like some are better at converting beta carotene to vitamin A than others.
Note also that glutamate sensitivity can develop with excessive exposure.
Someone who is otherwise not overly sensitive may become so after a week of eating lots of foods that contain it. After the body works through the backlog after a period of avoidance, the sensitivity is likely to lessen or even disappear.
To Eat or Not To Eat?
What does all this mean in the final analysis? Is it wise to avoid common foods containing yeast extract, autolyzed yeast, or hydrolyzed yeast?
For those who are not sensitive, foods that contain yeast extracts or other natural forms of glutamate are not a concern in moderation.
The main issue is that a lot of foods that contain MSG or yeast extracts are highly processed pseudo foods. And, these are the types of foods that people tend to have problems with portion control anyway.
For this reason, avoidance is a smart idea if you find it difficult to eat small amounts only occasionally. No doubt, these types of foods can be quite addictive.
In other words, yeast extract and its variations as additives in processed foods can trigger overeating even if no other symptoms are experienced.
For already sensitive individuals, an individualized call about what foods to eat and which to avoid is necessary and important. The assistance of a trained practitioner is a good idea if you are having trouble identifying this on your own.
The tricky part is that a reaction to natural glutamate and/or synthetic MSG can sometimes be delayed by up to 24-72 hours. This can make it difficult to assess sensitivity accurately.
For healthy individuals, glutamate plays a vital role both in good health and good hearth (food).
Avoiding only the synthetic type of MSG is necessary in most cases, which yeast extract is most definitely not.
(1) New Propaganda About MSG
(2) Glutamic Acid – It Is Not MSG or Monosodium Glutamate
(3) The Hungry Brain
(4) Excitotoxins by Russell Blaylock MD
stan
When I ask in grocery stores or restaurants if they use MSG– most don’t even know what it is!!!
stan
MSG should be outlawed! Gives me terrible headaches for days. Most fast foods and restaurants put it in their foods. Food products disguise it and call it something else. I try and make my own and eat home.
Joseph
Why does this sound like an infomercial written by the yeast extract manufacturers themselves? Yeast extract gives me the exact same headaches, muscle aches etc. that MSG does. There is a God. May He be merciful to those who wrong their fellow man.
Sarah
As mentioned in the article, some people have become so sensitized to MSG that they are sensitive to natural glutamates too. This does not mean yeast extract is the same as MSG or even unhealthy. Hope that makes sense.
anne
Me too! Im angry at health food companies sticking yeast extract in their product… and saying it is harmless. They don’t believe that anyone can be sensitive to it. I wrote to Marigold foods for example, with regard to their organic veg gravy granules. I got a stinking letter back saying I was wrong
John
Yeast extract gives me the same adverse symptoms as a MSG. So, I avoid it.
Sarah
Yes, it will for some folks who are extremely sensitive even to natural glutamate. I used to be sensitive too (I was fed MSG baby food as a toddler!), but after a period of avoidance, natural glutamates are fine for me now. I still avoid MSG like the plague!
Rina Fradette
What about those of us struggling with Candida overgrowth? Should we be avoiding yeast extracts?
Sarah
Yeast extract itself isn’t a problem for Candida, but the fact that it is in foods that DO promote Candida overgrowth (refined carb snackie type processed foods) is the concern.
Dawn
I would be interested in an article that talks about how autolyzed and hydrolyzed yeast extract is derived. Why is it considered natural?
Allison
Thank you for clarifying this. I have always been concerned about nutritional yeast containing MSG after reading that it did years ago when I was trying to be a raw foodist.
Can you tell me what your thoughts are about yeast bread? Sorry for such a dumb question but can yeast bread be gluten free?
Thank you John Moody for writing the article and Sarah for putting it on your site. I am so grateful for all the work you both have done.
Joyce
Thank you so very much for posting this article. I have been highly allergic to MSG and all foods where the glutamate acid has been altered or chemically changed. This condition developed after having an epidural block years ago. (If I could go back in time knowing what I know now, I would’ve chosen natural childbirth!) It basically ruined the Myelin Sheath and as a result I struggled for years with Intracranial Hypertension, causing severe brain pressure and headaches. Finally, I found relief when I learned about neurotoxins and exotoxins and read a book from Debby Anglesey, although I don’t use wheat and refined sugars anymore. As you stated and as I’ve learned, there are glutamates in many foods- tomatoes, milk, corn, and mushrooms to name a few. And I can eat them just fine. (Raw grass-fed milk for me though) It’s when the glutamates are altered that I react horrendously. So, whether that be the straight form of MSG or Yeast extract or anything Autolyzed and Hydrolyzed, it’s a “big no” for me. That would also include Aspartame aka Nutrasweet, Sucralose aka, Splenda and even L-cysteine (which can be made from human hair, duck feathers or hogs hair) and high fructose corn syrup. Consumers need to be aware that the FDA allows MSG to be added to many ingredients without disclosing it. Such as those listed as natural flavors, spices, broth etc. Also if you see a label with Disodoim Guanylate or Dispdoim Inosinate, chances are that the product may contain MSG. Of course less sensitive people may only need to avoid MSG itself. Sadly though, restaurants may advertise they don’t add any MSG, and of course they don’t add any MSG to their dishes, however the sauces or dressings used in their may contain MSG or altered glutamates in hidden forms. Forgive me for babbling on… this is a subject that hit home for me and I’m grateful for the article. Kindest regards, and health and happiness-Joyce
Maria
Could plain yeast (not yeast extract) be MSG?
Sarah
Plain yeast is different from yeast extract.