• anon6789@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    To get right to the meat of the article:

    New School Foods’ process starts by creating a biopolymer gel. This homogeneous hydrogel is placed in contact with a freezing surface and the gel is directionally frozen, resulting in the formation of thousands of directionally aligned, microscopic ice crystals traveling away from the freezing source.

    Once the gel is fully frozen, the ice is removed, leaving behind empty channels. These channels act as a scaffold; the channels are filled with proteins and other ingredients (color, flavors, fats) to form the muscle fibers.

    This was pretty close to my guess from looking at the pic of the the raw product. It looked like if you’d flatten out a swirled soft serve ice cream cone. The lattice structure should create a nice flakey texture.

    Flavor is always the hard part, but I’m not looking for 1:1 replacement there. Actual recipes can always help shape the flavor to your palette. Salmon is pretty distinct, so maybe a generic white fish may work better.

    There are always negative comments about it being processed food, but I still think the ecological benefits will outweigh that. Adapting our cooking can offset the near term nutritional issues. Use less meat, real or synthetic. We might not be able to keep our current habits if we want things to improve. We can start compromising now, or sacrifice later. That’s my feeling about it at least.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      11 months ago

      I haven’t been impressed with meatless fish flavours in general yet, to be honest. It doesn’t seem like “fishy” should be hard to achieve, but apparently it is.

      Here’s hoping the next generation impresses me more.

      • anon6789@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        I haven’t had the chance to try fake fish yet.

        Maybe they should go for something a little more exotic, say ostrich or crocodile. Close to flavors people know, but they’d go into with a more open mind. Maybe too novel though to be a lasting success though. I’ll leave that to the marketing people.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          11 months ago

          I wonder if we’ll ever get a blue raspberry of meats - something that doesn’t exist at all in nature. The trick is that most Anglos are pretty picky about what kind of land meat they will eat to start with.

              • Kerb@discuss.tchncs.de
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                11 months ago

                in theory youre right.

                but meat industry lobbyists woud surely try to take advantage of the outrage.

                i vaguely remember a post on reddit on this topic.

                something like “artesinal celebrety meat”

                which of course turned out to be an “artistic project” or something trying to
                “highlight the moral issues” with lab meat,
                or some other horseshit.

                EDIT: here’s the post i was talking about

                • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  11 months ago

                  I’m really damn worried about what the meat industry will do going forwards. The oil lobby got pretty crazy with a lot less pre-existing cultural fodder.