Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

    It's the stuff of science fiction novels and dystopian dreams: man-made, in-vitro meat grown in a lab.

    With global meat demand expected to grow almost 40 percent by 2025, scientists in the US and Europe have been working to develop synthetic, lab-grown meat they say could help offset climate change and provide a healthier, safer alternative to conventional meat production.

    New Harvest, an organization made up of 'meat scientists' from the US, UK, and the Netherlands, claims that it has the technology to produce processed meats like sausage, hamburger, chicken nuggets within several years.

    And one of the earliest adopters of this technology is likely to be fast-food restaurants which don't disclose their suppliers.

    Developing unprocessed meats like steaks and pork chops, meanwhile, involves technologies that don't yet exist and may take a decade or longer to develop, the scientists say.

    In the food and nutrition world, the cacophony of sound emerging around the consumption of red meat is deafening.

    Charcuterie and offal - parts of a butchered animal traditionally considered to be inedible - continue to be popular among foodie gourmets.

    Meanwhile, this week, the World Cancer Research Fund released what they described as "the most authoritative" report ever to confirm the link between red meat consumption and the risk of developing bowel cancer.

    While meat alternatives like vegetarian options exist, 'cultured meat' is produced by taking a number of cells from farm animals and 'proliferating' them in a nutrient-rich environment where they multiply in a culture. After attaching themselves to a sponge-like scaffold, they can be mechanically stretched to increase their size and protein content.

    The result? Cells that can be harvested, seasoned, cooked and consumed as a boneless, processed meat like sausage, hamburger or chicken nuggets.

    In 2009, scientists from the Netherlands grew pork meat in a laboratory using cells from a live pig to replicate growth in a Petri dish. The result was a soggy version of pork meat.

    Prior to that, New York researchers created a sort of fish fillet from goldfish tissue.
    It's been estimated that meat production is responsible for nearly 20 percent of the world's total greenhouse gas emissions.

    Meat scientists also claim that in-vitro meat could be customized by minimizing fat content and adding nutrients.

    The looming arrival of synthetic meat products is also investigated in an in-depth piece published in The New Yorker early this week titled, "Test-Tube Burgers."

    Meanwhile, Canadian dystopian author Margaret Atwood presaged the arrival of Frankenfoods like lab-grown meat in her 2003 novel Oryx and Crake. ChickieNobs, for instance, are genetically modified chickens engineered to have multiple breasts and no eyes or beak.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/life-st...u-2290694.html

  • #2
    Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

    MMMMMM, me thinks Soylent Green - it's people you know.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

      Originally posted by cmalbatros View Post
      MMMMMM, me thinks Soylent Green - it's people you know.
      ChickieNobs - It's People Who Matter

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

        Thats it Don! Stop the train!!! I want OFF

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

          I wondered why my new stove has a built-in setting for chicken nuggets....

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

            They should synthesize a chicken/pork meat. They could call it "chork" or "porken". Barbequed on pizza or porken nuggets.............it would be delish!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

              Originally posted by BigBagel View Post
              They should synthesize a chicken/pork meat. They could call it "chork" or "porken". Barbequed on pizza or porken nuggets.............it would be delish!
              Bagel Nobs*
              pork free, naturally

              *Bagel Nobs is a registered trademark whose secret ingredients fall under the corporate veil (see fracturing lubricant for legal precedent.)

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                Originally posted by BigBagel View Post
                They should synthesize a chicken/pork meat. They could call it "chork" or "porken". Barbequed on pizza or porken nuggets.............it would be delish!
                Not with chicken. Better... sligs!!!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                  The question still is cost.

                  There's no question you can 'carniculture' meat - the issue is if it is cheaper than grazing cows on pastureland - or stuffing cows full of genetically modified corn.

                  For plants - for example - for many species of trees it is much easier to use chemicals to create a 'blob' of semi-differentiated plant cells, then use different other chemicals to cause this blob to sprout seedlings.

                  While this process isn't cheap - it is pretty reasonable compared with trying to gather millions of pine nuts and sprouting them.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                    This is a great technology. I don't understand why you'd only eat tissue that was once attached to a central nervous system.

                    I like meat. But I am guessing that at some point in the next 50-100 years, killing animals for food -- particularly in the industrialized manner that has become the norm -- will be viewed as one of the evil, backwards things of a bygone era. Like burning witches at the stake, or bleeding people as medical treatment.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                      Have been traveling in the US for the first time in a few years and have been stunned by the amount of meat people eat. Waaaay past what is necessary... or even tastes good. Excessive consumption of beef, pork, and mutton, say more than a few ounces per day, causes progressive chronic inflammation that results in greatly increased risk of many of the diseases we associate with aging.

                      A new "plate" guideline for diet is coming out to replace the food pyramid. Basically, half the plate should be fruits and vegetables, 1 quarter of the plate should be a complex carbohydrate, and 1 quarter should be protein.

                      I won't have any problem with eating tissue cultured meat. It beats the chicken in which chicks are hatched and the males picked out and thrown live into a meat grinder, and then the females are kept in battery cages in which they cannot move and their beaks are cut off, and they are stacked so that droppings fall on birds below, and the whole thing is contaminated with antibiotic resistant bacteria because they are fed antibiotics to make them grow faster. Nothing natural about that at all.
                      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ--faib7to

                      I enjoy a good meal like everyone else. I eat chicken, fish, and meat some times. I am aware of what I am doing. Cultured tissue would be preferable.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                        "oryx and crake" is a great book.
                        Originally posted by don View Post
                        It's the stuff of science fiction novels and dystopian dreams: man-made, in-vitro meat grown in a lab.

                        With global meat demand expected to grow almost 40 percent by 2025, scientists in the US and Europe have been working to develop synthetic, lab-grown meat they say could help offset climate change and provide a healthier, safer alternative to conventional meat production.

                        New Harvest, an organization made up of 'meat scientists' from the US, UK, and the Netherlands, claims that it has the technology to produce processed meats like sausage, hamburger, chicken nuggets within several years.

                        And one of the earliest adopters of this technology is likely to be fast-food restaurants which don't disclose their suppliers.

                        Developing unprocessed meats like steaks and pork chops, meanwhile, involves technologies that don't yet exist and may take a decade or longer to develop, the scientists say.

                        In the food and nutrition world, the cacophony of sound emerging around the consumption of red meat is deafening.

                        Charcuterie and offal - parts of a butchered animal traditionally considered to be inedible - continue to be popular among foodie gourmets.

                        Meanwhile, this week, the World Cancer Research Fund released what they described as "the most authoritative" report ever to confirm the link between red meat consumption and the risk of developing bowel cancer.

                        While meat alternatives like vegetarian options exist, 'cultured meat' is produced by taking a number of cells from farm animals and 'proliferating' them in a nutrient-rich environment where they multiply in a culture. After attaching themselves to a sponge-like scaffold, they can be mechanically stretched to increase their size and protein content.

                        The result? Cells that can be harvested, seasoned, cooked and consumed as a boneless, processed meat like sausage, hamburger or chicken nuggets.

                        In 2009, scientists from the Netherlands grew pork meat in a laboratory using cells from a live pig to replicate growth in a Petri dish. The result was a soggy version of pork meat.

                        Prior to that, New York researchers created a sort of fish fillet from goldfish tissue.
                        It's been estimated that meat production is responsible for nearly 20 percent of the world's total greenhouse gas emissions.

                        Meat scientists also claim that in-vitro meat could be customized by minimizing fat content and adding nutrients.

                        The looming arrival of synthetic meat products is also investigated in an in-depth piece published in The New Yorker early this week titled, "Test-Tube Burgers."

                        Meanwhile, Canadian dystopian author Margaret Atwood presaged the arrival of Frankenfoods like lab-grown meat in her 2003 novel Oryx and Crake. ChickieNobs, for instance, are genetically modified chickens engineered to have multiple breasts and no eyes or beak.

                        http://www.independent.co.uk/life-st...u-2290694.html

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                          Originally posted by mooncliff View Post
                          Have been traveling in the US for the first time in a few years and have been stunned by the amount of meat people eat. Waaaay past what is necessary... or even tastes good. Excessive consumption of beef, pork, and mutton, say more than a few ounces per day, causes progressive chronic inflammation that results in greatly increased risk of many of the diseases we associate with aging.

                          A new "plate" guideline for diet is coming out to replace the food pyramid. Basically, half the plate should be fruits and vegetables, 1 quarter of the plate should be a complex carbohydrate, and 1 quarter should be protein.

                          I won't have any problem with eating tissue cultured meat. It beats the chicken in which chicks are hatched and the males picked out and thrown live into a meat grinder, and then the females are kept in battery cages in which they cannot move and their beaks are cut off, and they are stacked so that droppings fall on birds below, and the whole thing is contaminated with antibiotic resistant bacteria because they are fed antibiotics to make them grow faster. Nothing natural about that at all.
                          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ--faib7to

                          I enjoy a good meal like everyone else. I eat chicken, fish, and meat some times. I am aware of what I am doing. Cultured tissue would be preferable.
                          One caveat: industrial livestock techniques, as described above, would be in the same hands for lab meat. Many things are added to food to enhance sales. More is necessary with synthetics. America has a lot of waste to get rid of/make a profit from. Example - heavy metal sludge, an expensive waste, was approved to be spread on farmland. Confidence where the product meets the mouth isn't easily come by hereabouts.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Let Them Eat . . . ChickieNobs

                            Only the real deal for this fellow! No "glued meat" for me. Raised by real people the old-fashioned way. . . I recently picked up a copy of "Simple French Cooking," by the late Richard Olney. He describes the original way to make "force-meats," what we call pate. After removing the hard tissue, you take two substantial knives and do two-handed chopping until the desired degree of fineness is obtained. Mr. Olney says this is the way to preserve flavor, with the "mechanical robots (grinders/blenders)" pounding the tissue so hard that all the volatiles are beaten out of it.

                            A pity that most people these days eat such horrible food.

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            X