Category: plant based

  • 3 Mins Read

    With more than $10,000 in prize money on the table, young Asian tech teams competed in the ProVeg Food Innovation Challenge APAC.

    China, Korea, India, Indonesia, and Thailand were all victorious in the 2022 ProVeg Food Innovation Challenge APAC. This was the first year the challenge included all Asia Pacific regions. It focused on South-East Asia in 2021 and Mainland China in 2020.

    The winners

    Students from China’s Shanghai Ocean University and Hainan University won top prize for its plant-based pork floss designed for infants. The plant-based meat is fortified with vitamins A and D.

    Second prize winners came from Thailand and Indonesia; the Thai team, from Kasetsart University, created “DeCrab Jumbo Lump Crab Meat”, a plant-based crab meat with the taste and texture of conventional crab.

    crab
    A plant-based crab meat was a winner this year. Courtesy David Abbram via Pexels

    The Indonesian team, from Universitas Gadjah Mada, Universitas Indonesia, Universitas Katolik and Indonesia Atmajaya, developed “PepShot” — a plant-based energy shop designed for workaholics to boost productivity. It comes in fully biodegradable packaging.

    Korea, Thailand, and India shared the third prize. Korean students from Sung Kyun Kwan University and Yonsei University developed a new range of K-bakery products for South Korea’s biggest chain bakery using Beyond Pork, and vegetables.

    India’s team hailed from NIFTEM-Kundli, IIHM-Kolkata, St. Xaviers College-Kolkata, and NMCCE Mumbai. They developed plant-based kebabs and chicken modeled after HaoFood’s peanut-based chicken.

    Thailand’s team from Panyapiwat Institute of Management created the “Hi Burger” — a satay-flavored plant-based burger made from jackfruit and herbs and spices.

    Meeting Asia’s demand for plant-based food

    “This is the third year we have run the ProVeg Food Innovation Challenge and I am pleased to see that the competition is growing in scale and influence,” Shirley Lu, Managing Director of ProVeg Asia, said in a statement.

    omnifoods
    OmniFoods worked with the teams | Courtesy

    David Yeung, co-founder and CEO of the leading Asian pork and seafood successor brand, OmniFoods, said his company was delighted to have partnered in this year’s challenge. “Our team has been impressed by the creativity and passion of the younger generations who are committed to driving positive changes and accelerating sustainability through food innovation,” Yeung said.

    In total, 179 food ideas representing 163 universities, vied for the prizes. The students had to not only develop the food but also a go-to-market strategy for the products. The event was sponsored by PepsiCo, Unilever, Omnifoods, Beyond Meat, Oatly and CPF with the goal of raising awareness about the benefits of plant-based food as well as the innovative skills of young talent.

    “I’m proud of the quality and creativity of students’ work,” Lu said. “Young innovators from Asia are transforming the food systems across the region and we look forward to even more participation from the APAC region next year.”

    The post China Takes First Place In the 2022 ProVeg Food Innovation Challenge APAC appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • noodle bowl with fish ball
    2 Mins Read

    Singapore is getting its first plant-based mee pok in a partnership between the new Ha Li Fa brand, Eat, Plant, Love, and Bib Gourmand LiXin Teochew Fishball Noodles.

    A popular Chinese noodle dish, mee pok is one of many Asian dishes with few plant-based options, according to Eat, Plant, Love (EPL), the new plant-based brand under the Ha Li Fa umbrella.

    Eat, Plant, Love

    As part of the EPL brand launch, a plant-based mee pok is coming to the popular LiXin Teochew Fishball Noodles restaurants.

    mushroom noodle bowl
    EPL is using mushrooms and plant-based ingredients for its new range | Courtesy

    Ha Li Fa says the taste of the plant-based mee pok is “indistinguishable” from conventional. The dish features the EPL fish cakes, minced meat, vegetable rolls, and fried tau pok — stuffed tofu — served atop LiXin’s springy house noodles. The dish will also replace lard, a key ingredient in conventional mee pok, with shallot oil.

    Ha Li Fa is known for its popular BoBo fishballs and other seafood products, but the new EPL brand dives fully into plant-based options as the demand for alternatives is on the rise across Asia.

    The new range includes seven alternative seafood and meat products including plant-based and mushroom balls, vegetable rolls, plant-based calamari, fish cakes, minced meat, and stuffed tau pok.

    The new EPL products are launching at select supermarkets including Fair Price Finest and Xtra outlets.

    Asia ups its plant-based seafood

    Alternatives to conventional seafood are on the rise across Asia. In August, leading shrimp exporter Thai Union announced its first plant-based shrimp option.

    “We have had consumers come to us and say, ‘I know you are an expert in seafood and shrimp – I would like to have a shrimp tempura, but not containing shrimp’,” Tunyawat Kasemsuwan, Thai Union’s innovation director said last year. “They come to us because they see we understand product quality, its functional properties, characteristics, taste, and sensory texture.”

    Eat Plant Love's plant-based fish balls
    Eat Plant Love’s plant-based fish balls | Courtesy

    Also in August, Umami Meats debuted the world’s first cultivated fish ball in Singapore, which is currently the only government to have approved cultivated meat for sale and consumption.

    Mihir Pershad, Founder and CEO of Umami Meats said the company chose to develop fish ball laksa as a first prototype to create a dish that embodies Singapore’s rich food culture, “When we thought of classic, iconic Singaporean dishes, laksa immediately came to mind.”

    The post Singapore’s Seafood Giant Ha Li Fa Launches Plant-Based Seafood Brand Eat, Plant, Love appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 4 Mins Read

    You’re vegan, but your partner or family members aren’t on board. I managed to convince those closest to me to give up meat thanks to certain behavioral nudges. Here’s what worked. 

    It’s not easy being the only vegan in a relationship, around your family, or in a group of friends. From social gatherings to traveling, you might feel a little left out at certain times, or even frustrated that those around you don’t see eye to eye when it comes to eating plant-based. 

    That was me. When I first met my husband, he was a big meat eater. But over the course of several months of our dating life, I convinced him to ditch meat for good–and he’s been vegetarian ever since. My mother has also made steps towards a plant-based diet, giving up meat entirely while minimising her consumption of seafood, dairy and eggs.

    While you may not be able to persuade all of your loved ones to go vegan, quitting meat is one of the most impactful ways to reduce our climate impact. After all, animal agriculture alone accounts for nearly a fifth of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Below are some of my tried and true tips on positively influencing those around you to make sustainable changes to their diet. 

    Vegan bowl.

    1. Explain why you are plant-based, without judgment on your loved ones

    You have probably already explained why you chose to adopt a vegan diet, but have you listed all of your reasons? Chances are you may have mentioned your love for animals, but haven’t yet explained the real environmental or health benefits associated with a plant-based diet too. And the most important thing is to do so without judgment. Sometimes, people feel too pressured by the “preachy” vegan approach. They may be more interested and open-minded about the benefits of veganism if you share your personal story in an easygoing way.  

    2. Start off with one day a week 

    According to my husband, one of the ways he figured out he could go vegetarian was by practising Green Monday–ditching meat every single Monday. It doesn’t really have to be Monday, but the idea is that going veggie one day per week is a great stepping stone for most folks. Especially for heavy meat-eaters, they might not even realise how easy it is to quit eating animals until they kick start this new habit. So try to challenge your loved ones to just pick one meatless day per week, and you might just see this easily roll over into two or three days in no time. 

    Cook vegan meals together.

    3. Cook delicious meals together

    A lot of people don’t know where to start when it comes to vegan cooking, so convince them by showing the way. Cook some of your favourite plant-based dishes together, from vegan dumplings to breakfast staples like tofu scramble, or some of these super easy one-pot meals. Not only would it make your partner or family member feel less alone on their journey, it’ll also prove to the hardiest carnivores that vegan cooking can be fun and delicious. 

    4. Lay down the facts

    During more serious conversations about why I chose to go vegan, I made sure I could back up all my reasons with facts and figures. For example, how livestock farming accounts for more carbon emissions than cars on the road in Europe. It also means having scientific evidence and expert knowledge to refute any common misconceptions about veganism and health. If you need a few pointers, here are some vegan myths that have been debunked by a cardiologist. 

    Vegan noodles with tofu, mushrooms and greens.

    5. Ask them how they feel along the way

    It’s easy to get so caught up in your own personal story that you forget to ask how your friend or partner feels about changing their diet. If they remain unconvinced, ask them why. Perhaps they feel like meat-filled meals simply taste better–and knowing that, you can arm them with useful information, like which plant-based meat substitutes are the most delicious. If your loved ones are already making steps towards a plant-based lifestyle, make sure to check in with them to ask them how it’s going. It’ll make them feel supported on their journey. 

    6. Never stop encouraging 

    Finally, never stop being the encouraging voice. It’s easy to get bogged down with the slow pace of climate action, and frustrated about the inhumane treatment of animals in our broken global food system. But it’s important to remember that moving the needle forward, even just a hair, is something. Every little step counts. You’ll only motivate your loved ones more if you cheer them on. 


    All images courtesy of Unsplash.

    The post How To Convince Your Loved Ones To Quit Eating Meat first appeared on Green Queen.

    The post How To Convince Your Loved Ones To Quit Eating Meat appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 4 Mins Read New Zealand Government officials allegedly took action to dilute Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report recommendations. Official records demonstrate that representatives made the case for replacing a recommendation of plant-based diets with ‘healthy diets’. India and Kenya supported the motion. Germany and Sweden opposed the move. It appears that New Zealand took umbrage at […]

    The post New Zealand Officials Wanted ‘Plant-Based Diets’ Removed From IPCC Climate Action Plan Summary appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • CSIRO has launched a roadmap to capitalise on the rapidly growing demand for protein-based food products and highlights several protein products that present huge opportunities for Australia. In particular, the roadmap highlights the potential for more plant-based products, sustainable aquaculture for white flesh fish, and developing higher protein and tastier legumes, converting cuts of red…

    The post CSIRO maps a $13b future for protein-based foods appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • 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 Two chicken-focussed fast-food chains in Canada have taken the plunge to expand vegan options in their restaurants. KFC and Mary Brown’s have both announced a partnership with animal-free meat producer Lightlife.  KFC Canada will release a meatless popcorn chicken dish for a limited time. The move marks the second time the company has worked with […]

    The post Canada Doubles Down On Vegan Chicken Options As KFC And Mary Brown’s Partner With Lightlife appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read UK-based sauce manufacturer Sozyë has announced a new range of plant-based sauces. It called them Nish, Noyster, and Noya. Each is allergen and soya-free, while being a sustainable alternative to traditional fish, oyster, and soy products. Sozyë sauces have been developed in response to global deforestation for soy sauce crops. Commercial fishing impact was also […]

    The post Sozyë Unveils Range Of Sustainable Plant-Based Soy-Free Fish And Oyster Sauces appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Anglo-Dutch blue chip food and household company Unilever has been investigating plant-based foods. Across 141 studies, conducted between 2000 and 2020, the company has pulled together a review of key data. The chief takeaway is that plant-based food, and a transition towards it, should be a global priority. The diet has been shown to increase […]

    The post Unilever Research Concludes Plant-Based Diets Lead To Better Personal And Planetary Health appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read YOUR BEET is a female-founded platform, originating in Melbourne. The platform aims to make plant-based eating and aligning with climate-friendly ideas simple. Personal and planetary health are given priority, with users able to order nutritionally balanced food direct from an app. The startup recently closed a successful SEK 6 million funding round. Little is known […]

    The post Foodtech Startup Beet Launches Delivery App to Make Plant-Based Eating Easier appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 6 Mins Read Anyone whose recently been on the streets of Santiago, Chile, might have noticed posters plastered around the city that read, “If we are what we eat . . . That’s not what I want to be.”  The message came courtesy of The Live Green Co., a Santiago-based food-tech startup that uses an AI-powered recommendations engine […]

    The post Chilean Companies Lead The Next Big Wave Of Startups Cleaning Up Our Food Options With AI And Plants appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 5 Mins Read Driven by growing environmental awareness, ethical concerns, and health reasons, consumers are choosing plant-based more than ever before—and this shift in appetite is quickly reflecting on industry market data. Data in the latest market report by the leading natural and specialty product research and insight provider SPINS, which was commissioned by the Good Food Institute […]

    The post 10 Stats That Prove That Plant-Based Is The Future Of Food appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • 3 Mins Read More than half of Americans believe that the future of food is plant-based, a new consumer poll has found. A new survey conducted by The Harris Poll reveals that over half of American consumers see plant-based foods as a trend here to stay. The polling, commissioned by vegan food tech Alpha Foods, saw 52% of […]

    The post Over Half of Americans Say Future of Food Is Plant-Based – New Poll appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read Leading health experts say there is a “fundamental need” to “rapidly evolve” towards plant-based and other alternative protein.

    The post ‘Fundamental Need’ For Plant-Based and Alternative Protein Shift, Urge Health Experts appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read Food giant Danone is gearing to launch a new “plant-based 2.0” platform featuring “dairy-like” tech to revamp its vegan dairy portfolio.

    The post Vegan Dairy Is The Focus of Danone’s New ‘Plant-Based 2.0’ Platform appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Sodexo Canada will work with animal protection organisation HSI/Canada to switch 20% of its protein purchases to plant-based ones.

    The post Food Service Giant Sodexo To Go Plant-Based In 200 Canadians Locations appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Alternative dairy company Plant Veda has created vegan lassi (an Indian yogurt drink) from cashews and real fruits without cane sugar that contains gut-healthy probiotics in order to encourage more people to transition to a healthy plant-based diet and move away from animal milk products. Vancouver-based Plant Veda has made innovations in its cashew-based milk […]

    The post Dairy-Free Cashew & Oat Milk Maker Plant Veda Unveils Vegan Probiotic Lassi appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Researchers have found that people who are vegetarian have a healthier biomarker profile compared to meat-eating folk. The British study’s findings, presented at the recent virtual European Congress on Obesity (ECO), is consistent despite age and weight factors and crucially, is unaffected by smoking and alcohol consumption.  University of Glasgow researchers have found a consistent […]

    The post Vegetarians Score Better Health Biomarkers Than Meat-Eaters, New Study Finds appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 2 Mins Read Alternative meat company Hooray Foods, which has made headlines for its plant-based bacon, has raised US$2 million in a seed round that takes the company’s total funding to date around US$4 million. The funds will be used to expand its product range, upgrade its production facility and launch new sales channels. U.S.-based Hooray Foods’ seed […]

    The post Plant-Based Bacon Owner Hooray Foods Raises US$2M To Develop New Alt Meat Products appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Chief executive officer of agribusiness giant Cargill, David MacLennan said that in a few years time the plant-based protein industry will eat into the market share of animal-based products as the alternative protein sector rapidly expands. U.S.-based agri-giant Cargill, which regularly makes headlines for environmental and social missteps including food contamination, violation of rights at the […]

    The post Cargill CEO David MacLennan: Plant-Based Will Be “10% Of The Market” & To Cannibalize Meat Demand appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read A new study of frontline healthcare workers across six countries shows an association between plant-based diets and reduced risk of developing moderate or severe Covid-19. The study also found lower odds with pescatarian diets, though to a lesser extent compared to vegans, suggesting that there could be a link between symptom severity and dietary choices.  […]

    The post Plant-Based Diets Linked To 73% Lower Risk Of Severe Covid-19, New Global Study Finds appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 5 Mins Read In a new report on the investment case for a sustainable food system, analysts say that the plant-based food transition is “inevitable” and will bring about new opportunities for investors and businesses across the food supply chain. Released by the Credit Suisse Research Institute (CSRI), the report also identified the wider alternative protein industry, sustainable […]

    The post Global Food System Carbon Footprint Will Worsen, Transition To ‘Plant-Based Food Inevitable’ Says Credit Suisse Report appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Thanks to a collaboration with Iceland’s oldest farmer-owned dairy, Icelandic Provisions has unveiled the world’s first Oatmilk Skyr, a plant-based version of the traditional Icelandic dairy product that has been a traditional food for at least 1,000 years and is similar to Greek yogurt but thicker and with less sugar. U.S.-based Icelandic Provisions have officially […]

    The post Oatmilk Skyr: Icelandic Provisions Unveils Plant-Based Twist On The Heritage Dairy Product appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 13 Mins Read Based out of Minneapolis in the U.S. Midwest, Puris is the largest pea protein producer in North America, supplying famed plant-based burger maker Beyond Meat and backed by major food giants like Cargill. We recently had the chance to speak to Tyler Lorenzen, former NFL player and now the CEO of Puris Proteins, about the […]

    The post Puris CEO Tyler Lorenzen On Protein, Biodiversity & Health: ‘Peas Are A Great Solution For Sustainability & Environmental Stewardship’ appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Montreal-headquartered dairy company Saputo has acquired Bute Island Foods, the Scottish firm behind the legacy vegan cheese brand Sheese. As the plant-based trend continues to gain momentum, Saputo says it remains committed to “expand our footprint in the dairy alternatives space to meet the changing demands of our customers”.  Saputo announced on Tuesday (May 25) […]

    The post Canadian Dairy Giant Saputo Acquires Vegan ‘Sheese’ Brand Owner Bute Island Foods appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • Brinc Food Tech VC Demo Day

    4 Mins Read Asia venture accelerator firm Brinc and European FoodTech venture fund, Blue Horizon Ventures will invest over US$3 million into global foodtech startups through Brinc’s new scaleup program, which aims to help growth-stage companies enter markets throughout Southeast Asia and Greater China, an investment remit that the two parties describe as the “largest cheque size for foodtech accelerator […]

    The post Global VCs Brinc & Blue Horizon Jointly Invest US$3M+ In New FoodTech Scaleup Cross-Border Accelerator Program appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read Plant-based milk brands in India have been dealt a blow, after the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) struck down three petitions filed against the Indian dairy giant Amul. The complaints regarded an advertisement launched by Amul that claimed plant-based beverages “are not milk”.  The Indian plant-based milk sector has experienced a setback, after the […]

    The post Indian Plant-Based Milk Industry Dealt Blow After Petitions Against Dairy Giant Amul Dismissed appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read People in the U.K. are dramatically reducing their animal-based food intake since the pandemic, a new survey has found. The poll, focused on changing consumer habits in the country, revealed that as many as one in four Brits have already cut back on some form of animal products since the first lockdown, with the main […]

    The post Quarter Of Brits Reduced Animal-Based Foods Since Covid-19, Survey Finds appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 3 Mins Read Alternative dairy foodtech startup Vly, which creates milk from pea protein, has raised EUR€6.1M(approx. US$7.4M) in a Series A round led by Five Seasons Ventures. The capital raised will help the company scale its R&D and drive growth across the DACH region (Germany, Austria and Switzerland) and into new European markets, including the United Kingdom. […]

    The post Pea Protein Milk Startup Vly Raises US$7.4M Series A To Drive Growth Across Europe appeared first on Green Queen.

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  • 4 Mins Read In this excerpt taken from Chapter 2 of the new book “Think Like A Vegan,” co-authors Emilia A. Leese and Eva J. Charalambides pushes readers to take the first step on a journey kinder to the planet, humans and animals. Vegans Don’t Need Capes The heroism of veganism is overstated. We get asked if it’s […]

    The post ‘Vegans Don’t Need Capes’ – Exclusive Extract From New Think Like A Vegan Book appeared first on Green Queen.

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