Category: Future Foods

  • 3 Mins Read U.S. alt-meat startup Meati Foods recently announced it was taking pre-orders for its mycelium meat products. Chicken Cutlets and Crispy Cutlets were made available via direct-to-consumer pre-sales with all available items being allocated in under 24 hours. Within the first hour, 1,116 cutlets were sold to the company’ email subscribers. Following on from the success […]

    The post Meati Foods’ Mycelium-Based Whole-Cut Meat Pre-Orders Sell Out Within 24 Hours appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Famous for its build-it-yourself furniture, Ikea U.S. has now launched a plant-based cooking staple for make-at-home meals. ‘Världsklok’, translating to “world wise”, is a pea protein mince that can be used to create meatballs and burgers amongst other dishes.  The move is the latest effort from the Swedish furniture giant to embrace meat-free shoppers. Ikea […]

    The post Världsklok: IKEA Launches Plant-Based Mince That Can Be Used Like Conventional Ground Beef appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read Budding Californian CPG Voyage Foods has emerged from stealth development to announce the successful reverse engineering of certain favourite foods. The food tech is focussed on reproducing items considered unsustainable, allergen-heavy or vulnerable to supply issues, as the climate crisis worsens. So far it has created chocolate, peanut butter and coffee. Founder Adam Maxwell, formerly […]

    The post Voyage Foods: The Company Making Chocolate, Peanut Butter And Coffee Without Cacao, Peanuts or Labour Scandals appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read

    A number of companies are further along in the development process for cultivated meat than ever before. These innovators are leading the charge to gain U.S. regulatory approvals.

    Singapore is currently the only country to have granted regulatory approval for the commercial sale of cultivated meat products, with U.S.-based Eat Just receiving the go-ahead for two of its products. But optimism is high that the U.S. will follow Singapore’s lead soon, even our founder & editor-in-chief Sonalie Figueiras thinks so. According to Crunchbase, more than $2 billion in investment has poured into the cultivated meat sector over the past two years. The amount is expected to increase exponentially in 2022. So who’s leading the way? Below we roundup five cultivated meat companies that promise to are looking to conquer the U.S. market.

    1. Aleph Farms

    Based in Israel, Aleph Farms has enjoyed ongoing success. Debuting the world’s first cultivated ribeye steak early last year, it has gone on to secure additional funding with Leonardo DiCaprio included in the list of backers. While continuing to hone its cultivated products, the company has sought to develop critical strategic partnerships that, when regulatory approval is granted, will assist in scale-up and fast commercial launches.

    In a bid to drive down the cost of cultivated meat production, Aleph Farms recently announced a new partnership with Munich-based Wacker. The two will be developing FBS-free growth mediums that will be shared with the entire industry, to create price parity with conventional meat. Open-source tech sharing of this kind is designed to progress the entire sector, not one company.

    2. Upside Foods

    U.S.-based Upside Foods may have been the most disappointed company when regulatory approval was not granted by year-end 2021. Having predicted the breakthrough, it was ready to scale and serve its chicken nuggets and chicken hotdogs. In December last year, Upside revealed that it had successfully created an animal-component-free cell feed. The development represented a goal of the business since its 2015 inception. 

    Despite no confirmed green light for commercial sale, Upside opened its new ‘EPIC’ production facility. The location is capable of manufacturing 400,000 pounds of cultivated meat every year. Most recently, Upside has acquired cultivated seafood company Cultured Decadence. The move comes as seafood alternatives are showing significant market growth and are predicted to continue on an upward trajectory in 2022.

    3. Wildtype

    In a bid to manifest regulation progress, Wildtype has already signed U.S. distribution deals for its cultivated salmon. The San Francisco startup has agreements in place with sushi bar franchiser Snowfox and poké chain Pokéworks. The move follows completion of a pilot plant which brings production facilities, an education centre and tasting rooms all under one roof. The idea is to make the technology accessible and understandable, to encourage consumer trust and openness. When fully operational, the location will be able to produce 200,000 pounds of salmon a year.

    Wildtype’s salmon will be sushi-grade and whole cut. Green Queen tried the prototype last September and it was hard to differentiate from the real thing. 

    MeaTech steak. Photo by MeaTech.

    4. MeaTech 3D

    Israeli foodtech MeaTech 3D is focussed on two aspects of cultivated meat. The first is chicken fat that can be leveraged in a B2B scale, to add flavour to other cultivated developments. In addition, honing of industrial processes and technology to manufacture recognisable meat cuts. Steak and chicken breasts have both been slated for future unveiling.

    In early 2021. MeaTech secured $7 million in a funding round. $1.19 million was used to acquire Belgian startup Piece of Meat, to benefit from its stem cell technology. The rest was earmarked for the construction and fit-out of a pilot plant, also in Belgium, in 2022.

    Back in 2020, MeaTech became the first cultivated meat company to go public in the U.S. It claimed a $25 million valuation for its IPO.

    5. GOOD MEAT / Eat Just

    Making history as the first and only company to be allowed to sell cultivated meat products anywhere, Eat Just is the company to chase. December 2020 saw Eat Just bag regulatory approval for its GOOD meat chicken nuggets, in Singapore. Almost exactly one year later, GOOD Meat chicken breasts were also approved. In 2021 alone, Eat Just scooped $370 million in investments. It beat Upside Foods’ previous record.

    Gearing up for U.S. distribution, Eat Just has appointed Chef José Andrés as a GOOD Meat board member. The chef has agreed to service cultivated chicken in at least one of his U.S. restaurants, as soon as regulatory approval is granted. The move guarantees high profile rollout, thanks to the Michelin-starred businessman.


    Lead photo by Eat Just/GOOD Meat.

    The post 5 Cultivated Meat Companies Pushing For U.S. Launch in 2022 appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 5 Mins Read Australian-Californian animal-free dairy startup Change Foods has secured $12 million in a seed extension fundraising round, bringing the company’s total company seed funding to more than $15.3 million. This represents a first for the precision fermentation sector and will support continued R&D ahead of commercial launch. The oversubscribed was led by Route 66 Ventures. Upfield, […]

    The post Animal-Free Dairy Startup Change Foods Closes Record $12 Million Seed Extension To Disrupt Cheese appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 5 Mins Read Andre Menezes is the co-founder and CEO of Next Gen Foods, maker of vegan chicken TiNDLE, currently served at over 200 restaurants across six international cities. Today, the company announced a record-breaking $100 million Series A, the largest such round in the plant-based meat sector. We spoke to Menezes about why investors love Next Gen, […]

    The post From 0 to 130M in 16 months: TiNDLE’s Andre Menezes Is Taking On The World’s Most Consumed Meat And So Far, He’s Winning appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Korea’s Seawith, developer of cultivated beef, has announced a ₩1 billion investment from Mint Venture Partners. It follows previous backing from Hg Initiative, Daesung Startup Investment and Daily Partners. Launched in 2019, Seawith has made fast progress. The company claims it will be in a position to make cultivated steak for $3 per kilogram, by […]

    The post Seawith Nets ₩1 Billion for State-Of-The-Art Cultivated Meat Production Facility appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read After pioneering cultivated pork in March 2021, South Korean cellular agriculture startup Space F has unveiled a host of new innovation including an upgraded version of its existing cultivated pork prototype, a brand new cultivated beef prototype, presented as meatballs and a patty and their first cultivated chicken fillets and nuggets. The newly improved cultivated […]

    The post Space F Claims Korea’s First Cultivated Chicken And Beef Prototypes Alongside New Pork 2.0 appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 8 Mins Read

    “Normal, or with meat?” That’s the question customers at an Austrian Burger King will hear from now on as the chain brings plant-based meat to the forefront as the “normal” version.

    The majority of Burger King Austria’s menu will default to vegan meat unless customers specify otherwise, the chain announced last week.

    “At Burger King, we are making meatless indulgence a permanent fixture on our menu, because meat no longer comes naturally to everyone. With the provocative question “Normal or meat?”, we want to show that we take our customers and their needs seriously. Because from now on, we also serve almost our entire range on a plant-based basis”, says Jan-Christoph Küster, Marketing Director of the TQSR Group, the Austrian master franchisee of Burger King.

    Burger King has been leading a shift away from meat, following the launch of the Impossible Whopper in 2019 with much success. In Europe, it’s trialed several meat-free pop-ups. Recent data shared by the company found one in three Burger King burgers sold in Belgium is meat-free.

    Climate change is changing appetites. The global food system is in a crisis: from our health to our planet, experts continue to call for change. Burger King isn’t alone in its pivot; fast food is emerging as a bona fide solution as chains continue to add vegan meat to menus.

    Fast food, vegan food

    Demand for plant-based options has never been higher. Sales of vegan food in the U.S. alone surpassed $5 billion in 2019, according to the Plant Based Foods Association, the industry’s lobby group. Vegan meat sales make up more than $1 billion of the segment. According to the Good Food Institute, the category increased by more than $430 million in sales from 2019 to 2020, growing more than 72 percent in the last two years.

    Fast-food giants have struggled in recent years to satisfy changing consumer dietary preferences. McDonald’s has tried and failed with a number of healthy-leaning menu items. Despite consumer efforts to reduce saturated fat and sodium intake, they continue to expect reliable indulgences from their fast-food favorites. That’s been a difficult crossroads for the major burger chains.

    Part of the challenge is that chains that start out with healthier slants, like Chipotle and Panera, have succeeded in maintaining mostly healthy menus. But for the greasy burger drive-thrus like McDonald’s and Burger King, their customers haven’t been so quick to warm up to salads or breakfast burritos. But Beyond Meat, and rival Impossible Foods, have allowed fast-food customers to have their burgers and eat them too—quite literally. 

    Courtesy McDonald’s

    Omnivores and the growing segment of consumers identifying as flexitarian can enjoy the meaty taste and texture of beef but with protein made from plants that are both healthier and lower in emissions. Consumers have been into it; already on the rise in recent years, sales of vegan burgers skyrocketed during the early days of Covid.

    Impossible Whoppers and McPlants have certainly captured some of the fence-sitters, but the recent KFC partnership with Beyond Meat is a prime example of what the future of food—fast or not—looks like.

    The chain, known for a sparse menu containing little more than buckets of fried chicken, first trialed Beyond Meat’s vegan chicken in 2019 to critical acclaim. Its test pop-up at an Atlanta location sold more vegan chicken than a normal week’s worth of popcorn chicken in just a few hours. Customers lined up around the block for a taste.

    Atlanta was a prime choice. It has seen interest in vegan options boom in recent years thanks in large part to Pinky Cole’s viral burger pop-up, Slutty Vegan. She put Beyond’s rival Impossible Foods’ burger on the map in the meat-heavy South. Her dirty vegan burgers earned praise from celebrities including Snoop Dogg and Tyler Perry. Atlanta gave KFC’s foray into vegan chicken a kickstart that led to additional trials across the country, new permanent vegan menu items in the UK, and in January, a Veganuary launch in the U.S.

    The pizza chains are in, too with dairy-free cheese that’s often a harder sell than vegan meat. Pizza Hut has sporadically trialed vegan items—it’s long had dairy-free cheese options in Australia, slowly adding vegan meat to its menus with much success. Last November it announced a U.S. partnership with Beyond Meat to bring vegan sausage topping to pizzas. Domino’s added vegan pepperoni to the UK for Veganuary. But in the U.S., vegan cheese is hard to find from the big chains, even when they’ve put vegan meat on the menu.

    Courtesy Taco Bell

    Taco Bell, though, may just be the tortoise in this race. The Yum Brands chain’s bean burritos have long made it a haven for vegans and vegetarians. It was the first major chain to build out a vegan-friendly menu and a dedicated web page to help customers navigate it. Yum’s most recent Sustainability Report shows vegetarian options at Taco Bell make up 12 percent of the chain’s sales.

    “The Bell” upped its vegan game when it embraced plant-based meat in 2019. It became the first major chain to offer pulled oat meat across Europe.  

    The already plant-heavy menu at Taco Bell naturally lends itself to the flexitarian customer—swapping in Beyond Beef for cow beef may come as easy as choosing your hot sauce heat level. It may work so flawlessly, that the heavily-seasoned beef items may be fully plant-based before the end of the decade, with consumers hardly batting an eye. It’s logistically an easier transition when dealing with crumbled beef instead of whole burger patties. And if the plant-based trend continues—which seems inevitable—Taco Bell’s veggie-embracing past makes it the most logical front-runner to go permanently Beyond.

    Its chief rival, Chipotle, is upping its vegan options, too. While it’s always had vegan beans, it added tofu sofritos several years ago and a plant-based chorizo last month. It also just invested in mushroom meat company Meati’s $150 million Series C fundraise.

    Beyond the future

    Although it’s best known for its burgers, Beyond Meat’s aim has always been to supplant traditional meat from menus across all categories. Beyond has already improved on the original Beyond Burger, which launched in 2016, reducing sodium, and improving flavor and texture, among other attributes. The company’s range also includes sausage, crumbles, and chicken strips. And it is working on other formulations including the harder-to-mimic whole cuts of meat like bacon—what Brown calls his holy grail. It recently partnered with Pepsi on a vegan jerky launch.

    Impossible Foods has extended its reach, too. It recently landed at Starbucks and is playing catch-up to Beyond in international markets. But they’re not the only players in the game. Canada’s Field Roast landed a national deal with the leading hot dog chain, Wienerschnitzel.

    Courtesy Burger King

    But not all partnerships succeed. Despite hype and support from celebrities including Snoop Dogg, Dunkin’ pulled its Beyond Sausage menu items last year from most locations, citing lagging sales. It had been available at 9,000 locations nationwide.

    “We maintain a strong relationship with Beyond Meat and will continue to work together to explore innovative plant-based options to meet consumer demand for plant-based menu items,” the chain told Eat This, Not That! “The Beyond Sausage Breakfast Sandwich continues to be available at several hundred Dunkin’ restaurants throughout the country including in California, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Missouri, Nebraska, Hawaii, Utah, Kansas, and Wyoming.”

    The underperforming products don’t surprise experts. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, America has a fast-food problem. As of 2016, more than 36 percent of adults in the U.S. consumed fast food on any given day. Despite the millennial and Gen Z propensity toward sustainability and vegan food, they are still driving the market: nearly 45 percent regularly consume fast food compared with 37 percent of people over age 40, and 24 percent over age 60. 

    Fast food has been linked to a number of diet-related illnesses including heart disease, obesity, and Type 2 diabetes, among others. 

    It’s also a problem for the planet. Cheap beef often comes from Brazil, where it’s a leading cause of deforestation. In 2019, a coalition of investors urged leading chains including McDonald’s and KFC to take climate action. The group, which manages more than $6.5 trillion in assets, says animal agriculture is a leading cause of emissions and is resource-intensive. 

    Courtesy Beyond Meat

    “When it comes to evaluating market risk, rising global temperatures and intensifying competition for water access are increasingly material factors for investors,” said Eugenie Mathieu, from Aviva Investors, one of the signatories.

    “This is especially the case in the meat and dairy sector. From field to fork, investors want to understand which food companies are monitoring and minimising the long-term environmental risks in their supply chain. This engagement sends a clear message to the fast food sector that investors expect them to deliver sustainable supply chains.”

    With initiatives underway like New York City’s new vegan school lunch policy on Fridays, and California’s recently earmarked $700 million for plant-based school lunches, consumer tastes are going to change over time. Couple that with the continued pressure on brands to increase their sustainability commitments, and a shifting food system doesn’t look that far off.

    For Burger King, it signifies a future food system that’s fundamentally better than it was over the last half-century.

    “With this [‘normal or meat’] question, we want to stimulate the social debate and show that our plant-based alternatives have a confusing taste,” Burger King’s Küster says. “Meat is one option, but it is not the only one.”

    The post Is Burger King Austria’s New Campaign the Future of Fast Food? appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Mumbai startup Blue Tribe Foods has welcomed Anushka Sharma and Virat Kohli on board as investors and brand ambassadors. The news draws global attention to India’s burgeoning smart protein sector. The company is one of India’s leading plant-based meat manufacturers. Sharma and Kohli have long been figureheads for cruelty-free lifestyles and are bolstering their beliefs […]

    The post Ultimate Indian Power Couple Anushka Sharma And Virat Kohli Back Blue Tribe Foods’ Plant-Based Meat appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • Tik Tok Kitchen

    4 Mins Read The world of food is changing. Tech has invaded eating in a big way, from meal delivery to social media to online shopping and there ain’t no turning back. Investors too, are in the midst of a massive love affair with all things food. (And long may that continue! What’s more important than food?!) But […]

    The post From Tik Tok Restaurants To Personalized Q-Com: 10 Food Trends That Will Disrupt How We Eat, Cook & Grocery Shop appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 8 Mins Read It’s everywhere. Impossible Foods, Perfect Day, MeliBio, Nature’s Fynd, Mighty Drinks — these are just a few of the dozens of companies championing fermentation to make greater strides in the alternative protein sector, particular when it comes to cheese, milk, and eggs. Founders and investors are hugely bullish. In 2020, the Good Food Institute released […]

    The post Breaking Down Fermentation Shaping The Alt Protein Industry: From Precision To Biomass appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read The U.K. Government has published a paper entitled ‘The Benefits of Brexit’. The 100-page report has included one six-line paragraph alluding to potential novel food regulation updates. A review of existing regulations appears underway based on the report. The food paragraph pledges the government to work with the Food Standards Agency to ‘update the process […]

    The post UK Makes First Tentative Step To Join The Global Sustainable Protein Race With Post-Brexit Report appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read New kid on the block Zero Acre Farms, a San Francisco fat startup that has been in stealth mode until this week, has a big mission: disrupting vegetable oils with a fermented alternative that is more sustainable and healthier. The founding team claims its palm oil and corn oil replacement will help fight deforestation and […]

    The post A Microbe-Made Vegetable Oil Alternative? Coldplay, Branson & Downey Jr. Back Zero Acre Farms In $37 Million Series A appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read A new report from business technology outfit CIIE.Co and the Good Food Institute (GFI) claims that cultivated meat could radically transform India’s food system. The reasoning behind the claim comes from securing a domestic food chain, reduced impact of climate change, and reliable nutrition. The report states that without significant government investment, alongside industry acceptance […]

    The post India Needs Cultivated Meat, New Study Claims appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Undervalued and little understood outside of West Africa, fonio is a superfood waiting in the wings for its star moment. A viable alternative to quinoa and couscous, the gluten-free grain is a powerhouse of potential. Its benefits reach further than nutrition, with commercial production offering a sustainable living for farmers, not to mention that fonio […]

    The post African Super Millet: Should Fonio Be In Your Grains Pantry? appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read The vegan news never stops! Each week, the Green Queen team dives into the latest developments for plant-based foods around the world so you can catch up on what’s happening across the industry. This week, Japan’s 2Foods announced a Series A funding round for its “healthy junk food,” while vegan pet food brand Wild Earth secured […]

    The post The Week In Plant-Based: 2Foods Raises $4.4M For Healthy Junk Food, Vegan Pet Food Co. Wild Earth Nabs $10M, Oatly Ads Banned appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 10 Mins Read

    There’s an urgent shift needed on our planet, and our food system plays a critical role in fixing the climate crisis. It can feel like progress isn’t happening fast enough but take it from me, we’ve come farther than you may think.

    There’s a saying I’ve long loved. It’s attributed to the writer C.S. Lewis, but its origins aren’t totally clear. It goes something like this: day by day, nothing changes, but when we look back, everything is different. I thought of this recently as I walked past a payphone.

    The payphone is a token relic of yesteryear — an apt metaphor for the strangeness of going from necessity to irrelevance. Payphones have found their new relevance by way of memes and art galleries alike. This phone in particular also fit the bill of tattered relic — the phone handle had been pulled off the cord, the booth covered in graffiti, stickers, trash, and decades of grime. I wondered if it was an art project — street art like that is not uncommon in my Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles.

    What do kids think of it, I thought, as I stared at it a good few minutes. Why was this one left behind? Had it been forgotten? Left intentionally as a reminder of the passage of time? Certainly, just a few decades ago, there were payphones like this on every corner. How did this one get missed?

    Photo by Jakob Owens on Unsplash

    Back when payphones were still a thing and Impossible Burgers quite literally impossible, I ditched animal products for good, which was a bit like using one of those giant mobile phones that were as heavy as irons and never really worked.

    Unlike many vegans I’ve met over the years, I don’t have a great aha moment that turned me off from animal products. There was no PETA video or fur protest, no animal being tortured or slaughtered in front of me to seal the deal. 

    My story is rather mundane, truth be told. 

    ‘Picky eater’

    For as long as I can remember, I was dubbed a picky eater, which I certainly was, but only when it came to certain foods most people loved. It would be years, two decades, really, before I made the connection — before I realized that I wasn’t picky at all when it came to fruits, vegetables, nuts, or beans. The things I didn’t like were typically the foods other kids ate instead of finishing their vegetables: meat, cheese, butter, and eggs. 

    I recall revelatory moments eating my first heirloom tomato. I couldn’t have been more than five years old at the time. I remember my impatience in waiting for the corn and beans in our garden to grow so I could eat them until my belly hurt. My first artichoke was as near a religious experience as I’d ever had, peeling those thistled leaves one at a time like a meditation. This was food, I was sure.

    In my early teens, I toyed with vegetarianism — I wouldn’t hear the word vegan for several more years. By then I’d learned to eat better in a world filled mostly with foods I couldn’t stand. Peanut butter still holds a special place in my heart after sustaining me for all those years.

    Despite not knowing there was a word for what I was feeling, my conscience gnawed at me. Eating animals was unethical; it was something that just felt entirely true. It was undeniable. It still is.

    When I was 21, I spent six weeks backpacking through Australia. We cooked a lot from our small camp stove, freeze-dried soups and the like. But when we were in the cities between parks for a night or two, we’d find a restaurant. On one of those occasions, I was eating a piece of pizza and found myself incapable of taking another bite. I’d always struggled to like cheese, but like most anyone, I enjoyed pizza. Not that day though. I would eat cheese a few more times, and although my memories are a bit fuzzy now, I recall a sense of regret each time — the line separating me from animal products growing thicker and deeper with every bite.

    Photo by Kai Wei on Unsplash

    The problem was that it was incredibly difficult to forego animal products back then. I grew up in Western Pennsylvania where meat and cheese were staples. Restaurants had yet to embrace vegetables beyond the garnish, let alone an entire meal made from them. I sustained myself on coffee, French fries, and iceberg salads, as long as humanly possible, which was not very long at all. It was quite literally a choice between eating animals and starving most days.

    But as I longed for those ripe, juicy summer tomatoes, and the garden vegetables I loved as a child, I knew there was another way. There had to be. And, so I took a job working at my local health food store in their small vegetarian café. I had some experience cooking (a story for another time), but now I was going to learn a lot more. And I did.

    We made lentil loaf and tofu burgers, soups, stews, chilis; I even learned how to work a juicer and drank so much carrot juice it turned my skin orange (word to the wise). 

    The front of the store sold all kinds of healthy foods like beans you couldn’t find at conventional supermarkets, tahini paste, miso, nutritional yeast. Back then, if you wanted tofu, you had to fish it out of a big plastic bucket filled with ice-cold water. I don’t recall where the tofu was made but it had to be within a few hours or so of my town. 

    Vegenaise existed back then, and yes, people still mispronounced it then, too. There were two types of vegan milk: soy and rice. Edensoy was my favorite, but I assure you, it tasted nothing like the vegan milk we have today. It was made the Japanese way, malty and brown and delicious ice cold. 

    Rice milk had a bitter aftertaste and was too thin for me. But when Rice Dream made frozen desserts out of it, we all flocked to the freezer first thing on payday to get the chocolate-covered treats on sticks like children chasing the ice cream truck.

    I remember one chocolate company made a vegan candy bar with green tea and cocoa butter instead of chocolate — like white chocolate, I suppose. It had crisped rice in it, and I don’t know if it’s me romanticizing the memory or not, but I swear it was the best treat I’d ever had. 

    Courtesy Follow Your Heart

    The other options were typically made from carob, and I’m still a fan even though today we now have delicious vegan chocolate bars from Hershey’s, Cadbury, and Nestlé or truffles and treats like the folks at Lagusta’s Luscious make. If someone had told me back then that in just a few decades the best chocolates in the world would be completely dairy-free and delivered right to my door, I’d have thought they’d lost their mind.

    Back then we had vegan cheese options if you can call whatever those things were then cheese. They were waxy, oily slices and wedges, or weirder yet, dairy-free cheese that also had casein in it to help it melt. I’m not sure I’ll ever figure that one out, but several brands did it. 

    One thing I did know for sure was that I didn’t like any of it. I came to good terms with being cheeseless. Nutritional yeast can do some pretty heavy lifting and is still my preferred mac and cheese sauce (use a bit of the warm pasta water, paprika, a dash of dijon or olive oil, and as much nutritional yeast as you want — the more the better — and enjoy).

    We had some vegan meat options then, too. Boca Burgers were all the rage; they sizzled and smelled like fast food burgers as we cooked them on the café grill. They were too realistic for me then, but by today’s standards, they’d never rival Beyond or Impossible Burgers. Today if I want something “meaty” I usually opt for seitan, just as I did back then. 

    The future of food

    Lately, I’ve been thinking about those early vegan foods a lot. I enjoy the modern vegan versions of all of them, particularly the oat milk in my coffee and my monthly vegan chocolate subscription. There were many experiences that shaped how I eat today, which is mostly whole foods-based and macrobiotic with a very Mediterranean influence. Give me fresh salads, veggies, beans, olives, and nuts over KFC vegan nuggets any day. 

    Even though I have no interest in trying them myself, I love watching many of my contemporaries run to their local McDonald’s, Burger King, or KFC to try the new vegan options after decades of waiting. I remember the thrill my veggie friends and I would get going to McDonald’s and ordering the burger minus the patty — it makes me laugh just thinking about that soggy bun filled with pickles as something satisfying. What I would have given back then for a McPlant.

    But here we are, watching the slow hands of time as progress is indeed being made. KFC has vegan nuggets, McDonald’s has the McPlant burger; there are vegan pizza options at major chains, and so many sweets, treats, and dairy-free drinks at coffee shops, that it’s now impossible to try them all. 

    That’s not even including all of the progress being made in the cultivated meat sector, the precision fermentation, the biomass fermentation, and the techniques we still haven’t developed yet that are sure to gobsmack us with human ingenuity.

    When I first went vegan, the best “meat” option we really had was to crumble up tofu and pour in spice packets from a company called Fantastic Foods. I wasn’t sure if they were still in business. They are, barely. Fantastic’s website shows most of its spice mixes discontinued, including the tofu scramble mix that was one of the first I tried. It’s a sign of progress, of course, that instead of powdery packets dumped onto tofu, people are opting for any of the myriad options across refrigerator and freezer aisles, delivery apps, and more.

    Courtesy McDonald’s

    We have to ask ourselves: twenty years from now, will we be nostalgic for Beyond Burgers? What comes next in our race to clean up our food system? Because that’s what this is about, right? Fixing our food system so we can all live long enough to eat more food?

    Early food system innovations aren’t all that old — Tang, Spam, and all the rest of it—were positioned as conveniences for the busy homemaker in the 1950s. Before that most everything was made from scratch. These innovations promised freedom for housewives. But more than anything, they were profit-driven new revenue streams for the corporations who fed us. And that’s not to say profits don’t belong in our food system, they do, certainly. But these days, corporations have some problems to fix that go beyond just freeing up a few hours for tired housewives.

    That’s what scientists are telling us. It’s not about teenage ethics (although let’s be real, everything kind of is). Curbing meat and dairy consumption is a matter of life and death, both for our own health and the planet. We’ve already come so far. We’ve already seen more innovation than a hungry young teenage vegan could ever have imagined. And I think the best is yet to come. No, I know it is.

    It doesn’t feel inaccurate to suggest that factory farming will soon be just like that relic payphone — a moment out of time lost in modernity.

    I’m old enough to remember using payphones. They were staples in my youth: check-ins with friends late to meet at our scheduled rendezvous point, or quick calls home asking if I could stay out just a little longer. Nowadays it’s absurd to think about using one for any reason other than nostalgia or emergency. The computer in my pocket is better in every single way.

    And just like that payphone stopped me in my tracks on the street, I’m certain those factory farms will soon seem awkward and out of place, surpassed by technology that’s better in ways we can’t yet imagine. It’s a bit more complicated to remove a system that’s built for 55 billion animals than a phone booth, but like with anything, we’ll find a way. Because like that Lewis quote says, when we look back, everything is different.

    The post I Went Vegan In the ’90s and It’s Why I’m Certain the Future Is Vegan, Too appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read Barcelona’s Novameat has released images of a blue steak. Not blue as in cooking preference, actually blue in colour. The bioengineering startup claims that it is the world’s first meat alternative to encapsulate all five kingdom classifications. Using its patented forming technology, the company produced a whole-cut hybrid steak with a blue hue. Novameat has […]

    The post Is This 3D-Printed Blue Steak The Future Of Meat? One Spanish Startup Thinks So appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 4 Mins Read California’s cultivated meat trailblazer Upside Foods has announced its acquisition of cultivated seafood Cultured Decadence. The Wisconsin-based cultivated seafood company will bring high-impact seafood products to the Upside portfolio. Combined capabilities and technical specificity will speed production. Cultured Decadence will adopt Upside’s brand name but remain in the Midwest as a production hub. Cultured Decadence […]

    The post As Regulation Gets Closer, Upside Foods Acquires Cultivated Seafood Company Cultured Decadence appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 2022 Alt Protein Trends

    10 Mins Read Another year, another set of Green Queen trend predictions. 2021 was a bumper year for the global alternative protein industry and less than three weeks into 2022, it’s looking even more wild. The raises are getting bigger, the launches are getting bolder, the plant-based meat is getting real-er (ok, not a word). And the reality […]

    The post 12 Alt Protein Trends To Watch: Green Queen’s 2022 Industry Predictions appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 4 Mins Read Vegan fried chick*n brand VFC Foods has announced the closure of a successful seed round led by impact VC fund Veg Capital. The £7.5 million (approx. $10.2 million) investment brings the young alt meat company’s total funding to date to £10.5 million. Previous pre-seed funding was also led by animal charity-supporting Veg Capital. New funding […]

    The post UK Vegan Fried Chicken Brand VFC Bags $10.2 Million To Accelerate US Expansion appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read After reviewing public records, The Good Food Institute (GFI) APAC, a non-profit that works to expedite the alternative protein industry across the region, has determined that China’s alternative protein sector is being increasingly better funded to support scale-up and product development. Previous recipients of similar financial allocations in China include solar panel developers and electric […]

    The post China’s Surging Alternative Protein Sector Gets Government Support Ahead Of Next Food Tech Boom appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • The double mcplant
    3 Mins Read

    Following its successful launch in the U.K. last year, McDonald’s is now offering consumers a Double McPlant across all U.K. and Ireland locations.

    “You asked. We listened,” reads a post on the McDonald’s website. The fast-food chain says it’s making the popular vegan burger “twice as nice” by featuring two Beyond Meat patties instead of one. The new sandwiches will be available beginning January 4th, just in time for the popular month-long vegan campaign, Veganuary.

    The Double McPlant

    The new burger option joins the original McPlant and Veggie Dippers as the only other Vegetarian Society-approved vegan options on the U.K. menu.

    McDonald’s credits its customers for continuing to pressure the chain to add the new menu item.

    double mcplant
    McDonald’s has added a Double McPlant in the U.K.

    One customer Tweeted: “I know it’s 7am but when are @McDonaldsUK going to allow a Double McPlant?? All I want is the option to have two patties. this is the important stuff I need addressed.” (@hollzap) 

    Another fan Tweeted: “I have said on many occasions that the McPlant has changed my life, but if there were to be a double McPlant?  I can only imagine”. (@Psijguy) 

    Just like the original McPlant, the Double McPlant is vegan-certified and cooked separately from other McDonald’s burgers and sandwiches using dedicated utensils.

    The McPlant

    The initial U.K. rollout saw 250 locations nationwide offer the McPlant burger. But continued demand led the chain to make the burger available nationwide last January.

    “We’re so pleased that our McPlant is now officially ‘everywhere’ and available for more of our customers to taste and enjoy,” Michelle Graham-Clare, chief marketing officer at McDonald’s U.K. and Ireland said in a statement last year. “We saw a remarkable response to the trial period back in October. And, now McPlant is on the high-street, in retail parks and service stations all over the U.K. and Ireland.”

    Image courtesy of Mcdonald’s.

    The McPlant burger was developed to taste like traditional McDonald’s burgers including the iconic sesame seed bun and vegan cheese.

    The permanent inclusion and expansion of the McPlant is part of McDonald’s commitment to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.

    While the double burger is currently only being offered in the U.K. and Ireland, the original McPlant is still widely available across Europe in locations throughout Sweden, Denmark, and Portugal, as well as in Australia, among other markets.

    But despite its success across the pond, the McPlant struggled in the U.S., with sales failing to meet expectations following a 600-store trial run that ended earlier this year.

    The post ‘You Asked. We Listened.’ McDonald’s Doubles the McPlant Burger appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 4 Mins Read A number of recent developments have propelled South Korea onto the global alt protein stage. Both food tech and manufacturing sectors have announced victories and new launches. Now, the country is signposted as an industry player to watch. The Korea International Trade Association predicts that plant-based meat will be more in demand than animal meat […]

    The post Country To Watch: 5 Signs South Korea’s Alternative Protein Industry Is On Fire appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • philadelphia cream cheese
    3 Mins Read

    After popular U.S.-based cream cheese brand Philadelphia launched its first dairy-free offering in Tesco stores across the U.K. in January, the vegan cream cheese is now available in the U.S.

    According to Robert Scott, president of R&D at Kraft Heinz, it took the company about two years to come up with the recipe for the plant-based Philly.

    “Getting dairy notes in a plant base is hard,” Scott said noting the product isn’t a taste match to the dairy-based option. The company also gave the cream cheese butter notes. “To get to butter … that’s a huge success metric,” he said.

    Kraft, like other multinational food giants, is aiming for the flexitarian shopper. “There’s a big opportunity” for Kraft, said Scott.

    Leading Cream Cheese Brand Philadelphia Launches Its First Dairy-Free Spread
    Courtesy Philadelphia

    The initial launch came in January following a late holiday season effort by the brand to convince its customers not to make cheesecakes in the wake of a cream cheese shortage.

    “With over half a million people taking part in this year’s Veganuary, the appetite for plant-based alternatives has never been more apparent,” Louise Stigant, UK managing director of Philadelphia’s parent company, Mondelēz International, said in a statement.

    “We’ve worked hard to make sure new Philadelphia Plant Based really delivers the same great taste and creaminess that people love and expect from Philadelphia and we’re delighted that there’s now a Philadelphia product for everyone – not a bagel or slice of toasted sourdough ever needs to go without again!”

    Two years in development

    The dairy-free offering, which was two years in the making, is made from a blend of coconut oil and faba beans. The initial product launched in the U.K. was made from almonds and oats.

    While Philadelphia is a staple on U.S. shelves, the brand said it chose the U.K. for the launch because of its strong interest in a plant-based diet. According to Mondelēz, one in five U.K. shoppers are interested in or already following a plant-based diet. And they want suitable replacements for their favorite meat and dairy products.

    “Given the increasing relevance for shoppers with huge growth in plant-based lifestyles, we believe our new plant-based recipe is a step forward in the market to drive awareness of cheese alternatives, which excel on taste and quality,” brand manager Abi Eayrs said.

    But now it’s gearing up for success in the U.S. market. Dairy alternatives continue to see sales climb across the plant-based sector even as sales for vegan meat dropped nine percent in the last year. Sales for dairy alternatives were up 1.4 percent.

    Philadelphia’s plant-based cream cheese is now available at grocery stores in Atlanta, Houston, Miami, and other locations in the Southeast, and is expected to roll out to more stores by summer.

    The post Dairy-Free Philadelphia Cream Cheese Makes Its U.S. Debut appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read Buenos Aires’ food tech startup Kernel Mycofoods has announced its 2022 roadmap following a successful funding round. Led by Union Group Ventures, the round brings $15 million into the company. Capital will be used to ramp up production and delivery of its fungi protein food solutions. Strategic partnerships are being actively sought alongside. Kernel uses […]

    The post Kernel Mycofoods Secures $15 Million To Support Delivery Of $250 Million In Reported Pre-Sale Orders appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read South Korean startup DaNAgreen has bagged ₩8 billion (approx. US$6.7 million). The R&D company announced the news at the end of 2021. Lotte Ventures, Timewise Investment and Pathfinder H all participated in the Series A investment round. Closure brings total funding to ₩10 billion within four years. The Series A money will be used to […]

    The post Cultivated Meat Startup DaNAgreen Announces Successful Series A Funding Round Completion appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read Leading humanitarian chef José Andrés has joined food tech startup Eat Just. He has taken up a board position for the GOOD Meat brand. Alongside his appointment, Andrés has pledged to serve cultivated chicken in one of his U.S. restaurants, pending regulatory approval. As a board member, he will offer introductions to potential farm partners […]

    The post Eat Just Announces Chef José Andrés Has Joined Its GOOD Meat Board Of Directors appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • Plant Based World Expo NY

    11 Mins Read What was it like attending the Plant Based World Expo in New York City? Green Queen tried it all and there were so many great vegan foods it was hard to pinpoint the best, but we narrowed it down to these. After spending the few months drooling over the products we report on all year […]

    The post Plant Based World Expo NYC: The 11 Best Vegan Foods We Tried appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.