March 30, 2006
In the Future, the Meatspace Will be on the Counter!
In yet another “as strange as fiction” story, scientists are experimenting with a process that grows meat in an incubator. Similar to a breadmaker, the idea is you give your new “Ronco Meat Maker” a few cells of whatever tasty dead animal you’re interested in growing (perhaps a few pre-chewed bites of a really tasty hamburger you didn’t finish), then add whatever the meat equivalent of yeast is - close the lid and presto! A short while later, you have a large hunk of “pre-dead” animal just waiting to be consumed!
Instead of being cut from a farm animal, the beef, pork or chicken would be grown in incubators from a few starter cells, a growth medium and some hormones to get the cells to divide.
The first attempts by scientists who grow animal muscle tissue in the lab have been small in scale. But researchers are looking forward to the day when meat could be cultivated in industrial bioreactors or even in a device sitting on a kitchen counter…
…He said a device similar to a bread maker could one day be used to manufacture meat in the home.
Matheny said muscle produced in an incubator could have reduced fat content, and the process would do away with problems such as bacterial contamination and mad cow disease.
Call me crazed, but this seems to have all sorts of bizarre uses. Does this mean that in the future, when someone says, “eat me, asshole!”, you’re supposed to scrape off a few skin cells and put them in your Ronco Meat Maker machine? If so, what’s the comeback line supposed to be - “Will you supply katsup with that?”
In any event, it looks like the best this thing can do is create pre-processed meat items, so don’t expect a T-Bone steak out of the deal. And apparently, growing meat in an incubator leaves something to be desired in terms of taste - early tests show that grown frog muscle tissue tastes like “Jelly on a cloth.” Yum!
Comments
August 3, 2006
DannyV_El_Acme said:
Yuck. As much as I aprove of technological development, please, PLEASE keep food as low tech and tasty as it already is. I’m not ready for those one-tablet meals, give me a good ol’ Churrasco steak with A-1 and fries!
SFAM said:
I hear that Soylent Green stuff tastes good…gotta try that stuff!
November 7, 2006
Hugo said:
“Eat recycled food. It’s good for the environment, and OK for you.”
November 8, 2006
Mr. Roboto said:
If they have the ability to clone entire animals, why not replicate the meat? They just need to tweak the process, but it would save a lot of grief with the PETA-punks and ethicists regarding cloning entire critters.
Now if they use this to make human meat for canibals, there’s going to be problems…
November 11, 2006
SFAM said:
Hi Mr. Roboto, the idea of cloning only 70% of an adult organism is an interesting one - although I’m guessing its not that easy!
April 7, 2008
Anonymous said:
RAmm sAtn
someone said:
why clone an entire animal, just do the f.cking meat cubes and we can cut and cook… realy better… between, PETA punks and ethicists are funny… let them live to entertain ourselves… they really think that they can reach something with his manifestations… poor kids… if you need to call some attention you need to be harder and pointless… no one see a rose but everyone feel a punch in the face… dream on…