On an anecdotal level, Arnold Schwarzenegger revealed in his autobiography that when he was in the Austrian Army(and still doing bodybuilding competitions), he found that the meats in the Army canteens were significantly overcooked, so that in order to get enough (utilisable) protein, he had to eat twice as much as normal in order to get sizeable muscles, and then, of course, he had to exercise twice as much in order to get rid of the excess flab.
Re Wrangham:- This guy is a fraud, so any studies by the guy can reasonably be treated with contempt. He made a ridiculous claim once that someone on a raw animal and raw vegetable diet would have to spend 5.7 to 6.2(!) hours chewing foods every single day in order to get enough calories from such a raw diet in order to thrive. This not only shows that he has never met a RVAFer let alone studied them, but the greatly exaggerated figure is so unrealistic, he must have just arbitrarily made it up. And that's not even taking into account the fact that evidence of cooking c.1.8/1.9 million years ago is heavily disputed and too sparse to be remotely credible.
Re studies done on lowered protein-digestibility of cooked animal foods. Here's a paragraph:-
"What is much more interesting is that BYV openly admits that cooking at 100 degrees C plus decreases the protein digestibility of fish and meat(meat being a primary food of the Palaeolithic diet which BYV advocates):- “From Oste [1991], heating (above 100°C, or 212°F) decreases meat protein digestibility. Frying chickpeas, oven-heating winged beans, or roasting cereals at 200-280°C (392-536°F) reduces protein digestibility. Seidler [1987] studied the effects of heating on the digestibility of the protein in hake, a type of fish. Fish meat heated for 10 minutes at 130°C (266°F), showed a 1.5% decrease in protein digestibility. Similar heating of hake meat in the presence of potato starch, soy oil, and salt caused a 6% decrease in amino acid content.” (Taken from Part 2a of the article linked immediately above)"
taken from:-
http://www.rawpaleodiet.com/anti-raw-bias-on-beyondvegcom-website-debunked/I found it amusing that the above link was 1st on google, with the beyondveg.com ranking only 2nd(all I did was search for "beyondveg.com oste").
Re eggs:- The eggs studies are flawed because they focus on raw, unfertilised eggs. In the wild, eggs would have been laid only seasonally by birds in relativley inaccessible places, not all year round, implying that they were only a rare treat in palaeo times given lack of domestication of birds( apparently, constant egg-laying requires massive amounts of unhealthy grains); plus they would mostly have been fertilised, so that the antinutrient avidin would have been greatly reduced via fertilisation and the digestibility of such raw fertilised eggs would have been increased. Plus, digestion would be less harmful since no heat-created toxins such as AGEs would have been present in the raw eggs.Oh, and the denaturing of proteins created by cooking, not the same as the denaturing done via stomach-acids, forces the body to work harder re digestion, requiring more digestive enzymes, thus harming the body over time through strain.It's no surprise that many cooked-foodists as they get older develop digestive problems and require enzyme supplements in order to enhance digestion.