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not had one of those, but i did try the impossible whopper. tasted the same as a regular whopper. which is kind of the point, i suppose but it's not like i ate it and went "WOW! this taste fantastic!" clever they can make it taste the same but the same isn't mind-blowing.
I can't figure out why Chickpeas (the stuff in these "meatless" wonderfoods) are more expensive to make into food than raising and butchering a cow.
Either growing plants for food is more expensive than raising cows; or, the food producers are ripping off the veggieheads.
Things that make you go hmmmm....
The Impossible brand stuff isn't chickpeas; it's heme and genetically modified yeast. Beyond Burgers are pea protein extract and various TVPs.
As for why those are expensive, it's marketing, shelf space, R&D, packaging, shipping, storage, and good old-fashioned money making at work.
But if you're paying a cost per pound of chickpeas what you would for beef, you're certainly getting ripped off. I can get a 5 pound bag for $8, and use it to make several dozen falafel burgers.
The Impossible brand stuff isn't chickpeas; it's heme and genetically modified yeast. Beyond Burgers are pea protein extract and various TVPs.
As for why those are expensive, it's marketing, shelf space, R&D, packaging, shipping, storage, and good old-fashioned money making at work.
But if you're paying a cost per pound of chickpeas what you would for beef, you're certainly getting ripped off. I can get a 5 pound bag for $8, and use it to make several dozen falafel burgers.
My daughter bought some and hated them. Thought the texture was weird. Not my thing. Not tempted to try. I don't eat a lot of meat and don't eat stuff that pretends to be meat.
not had one of those, but i did try the impossible whopper. tasted the same as a regular whopper. which is kind of the point, i suppose but it's not like i ate it and went "WOW! this taste fantastic!" clever they can make it taste the same but the same isn't mind-blowing.
With that said, the health benefits aren't even worth it. Maybe somewhere down the road when it becomes a cheaper alternative, I can see it used in school lunch programs and a way to feed masses of people. A method to create a plant based meat product with the benifits of protein would go a long way to feeding a starving third world country. But, not when it's a dollar more than the meat it's trying replicate.
burger king is basically Fat food. The most unhealthy way to eat
The grease and salt is where the taste is. The bun is totally unhealthy.
just why eat that crap
which is why we very rarely eat thatburger king is basically Fat food. The most unhealthy way to eat
The grease and salt is where the taste is. The bun is totally unhealthy.
just why eat that crap
grey?Impossible Foods gets their heme from the roots of soybean plants. It's the same compund in real beef that makes it taste like beef and gives its its beefy color. Which techniques are better? I suppose that remains to be seen. Again, I've only had the Impossible Burger from Burger King. I would however, like to try a package of the product and see if it still turns out grey as it did in the Whopper. Then again, the beef Whopper is grey. So who knows?
With that said, the health benefits aren't even worth it. Maybe somewhere down the road when it becomes a cheaper alternative, I can see it used in school lunch programs and a way to feed masses of people. A method to create a plant based meat product with the benifits of protein would go a long way to feeding a starving third world country. But, not when it's a dollar more than the meat it's trying replicate.
According to a University of Michigan analysis of the environmental impact of the Beyond Burger, is good news for the climate: relative to a beef burger, production of the Beyond generated 90 per cent fewer greenhouse gas emissions, used 93 per cent less land, 99 per cent less water and about half the energy.
https://www.macleans.ca/news/canada...pularity-of-beyond-meat-means-for-our-planet/
Awesome! Would I buy it again? Hell, ya!
ETA before anyone feels sorry for the meat industry Tyson is a backer of beyond beef.
You eat a burger you and many, many hungry non-Hindus take one cow's life.
The yeast-burgers kill innumerous living things. Seems pretty unethical to place your survival above all those other life-forms.
You eat a cow burger it ain't just one cow it's hundreds, however many they process in the slaughter house that day. The ground cows are all mixed together.