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According to the official site of Ahmed Ali Nutrition, Beef Amino is marketed as a dietary supplement: “tablets that are a source of amino acids from hydrolysed beef protein.”
The idea: by using hydrolysed beef protein, the supplement provides amino acids (both essential and non‑essential), presumably helping support muscle maintenance or growth.
Ingredients listed: hydrolysed beef protein, along with food‑supplement additives (stabilizer/firming agent E341, anti‑caking agents E551 and E470b).
From public product listings:
| Feature | Info |
|---|---|
| Format | 300 tablets per container. |
| Price (Egypt, retail listing) | ~ 1000 EGP on official site. |
| Target audience (as per marketing) | Adults seeking amino‑acid supplementation via beef-derived protein. |
| Use case (as per marketing) | As a supplemental source of amino acids with beef protein base — presumably for those who want to support muscle protein needs without whey/dairy. |
Though direct independent studies for “Ahmed Ali Beef Amino” specifically are not publicly referenced, it follows a similar concept to other beef‑derived amino supplements. For example, beef‑based amino / protein supplements are often promoted to:
Provide amino acids including essential and branched‑chain amino acids (BCAAs) to support muscle protein synthesis.
Offer a non-dairy alternative for people with lactose intolerance or those avoiding whey/dairy proteins.
Potentially support recovery and limit muscle breakdown when dietary protein intake may be insufficient.
Hence, for someone looking for “beef‑derived amino support” instead of whey/dairy‑derived proteins, Beef Amino might serve as a relevant option.
I did not find robust independent scientific studies verifying the effectiveness of this specific Beef Amino supplement (or similar beef‑tablet amino supplements) compared to standard dietary protein sources.
As with any amino / protein supplement, it should not replace a balanced diet — whole food protein (meat, eggs, dairy or plant‑based, depending on your diet) remains important.
The listed ingredients include stabilizers and anti‑caking agents — not necessarily harmful, but it’s a factor to note if you’re sensitive or prefer minimal‑additive supplements.
As it’s sold in tablet form, absorption and efficacy may differ from a complete protein powder or whole protein sources.
If you have dietary restrictions, health conditions (liver, kidney, digestion, allergies), or are under 18, as with any supplement — it’s wise to talk to a healthcare professional.