Singapore: Fungi-based food product that tastes and shreds like meat

Published 2022년 8월 29일

Tridge summary

Researchers at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), led by Professor William Chen, have developed a technique to cultivate a fungi-based food product that serves as a healthier, tastier, and greener alternative to plant-based protein. The fungi is grown from nutrient-rich common food waste, making it more nutritious and offering an opportunity to reuse food waste and byproducts. The collaboration with The FOODBOWL in New Zealand aims to scale-up the fungi cultivation method, with the goal to commercialize the solution by 2024. The fungi-based food product addresses the criticisms of plant-based protein by resembling and tasting more like meat, containing higher levels of amino acids, and offering a more easily accepted alternative for consumers.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Scientists from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed a technique to cultivate a fungi-based food product that could serve as a healthier, better tasting, and greener alternative to plant-based protein. The fungi used to cultivate the product is grown from a base of nutrient-rich common food waste, which infuses the fungi with more essential nutrients, such as protein, iron, and amino acids. This makes them more nutritious than ingredients commonly used in plant-based alternative meat, such as peas, chickpeas, wheat gluten, and soy.The cultivation of the NTU-developed food product would also offer an opportunity to reuse common food waste and byproducts of agriculture and the food and beverage industry, such as soybean skin, wheat ...
Source: Phys

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