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Biotech

Meatball From Long-Extinct Mammoth Created By Food Firm (theguardian.com) 72

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: A mammoth meatball has been created by a cultivated meat company, resurrecting the flesh of the long-extinct animals. The project aims to demonstrate the potential of meat grown from cells, without the slaughter of animals, and to highlight the link between large-scale livestock production and the destruction of wildlife and the climate crisis.

The mammoth meatball was produced by Vow, an Australian company, which is taking a different approach to cultured meat. There are scores of companies working on replacements for conventional meat, such as chicken, pork and beef. But Vow is aiming to mix and match cells from unconventional species to create new kinds of meat. The company has already investigated the potential of more than 50 species, including alpaca, buffalo, crocodile, kangaroo, peacocks and different types of fish. The first cultivated meat to be sold to diners will be Japanese quail, which the company expects will be in restaurants in Singapore this year. [...]

Vow worked with Prof Ernst Wolvetang, at the Australian Institute for Bioengineering at the University of Queensland, to create the mammoth muscle protein. His team took the DNA sequence for mammoth myoglobin, a key muscle protein in giving meat its flavor, and filled in the few gaps using elephant DNA. This sequence was placed in myoblast stem cells from a sheep, which replicated to grow to the 20 billion cells subsequently used by the company to grow the mammoth meat. "It was ridiculously easy and fast," said Wolvetang. "We did this in a couple of weeks." Initially, the idea was to produce dodo meat, he said, but the DNA sequences needed do not exist.
Tim Noakesmith, cofounder of Vow, said: "We chose the woolly mammoth because it's a symbol of diversity loss and a symbol of climate change." Bas Korsten at creative agency Wunderman Thompson added: "Our aim is to start a conversation about how we eat, and what the future alternatives can look and taste like. Cultured meat is meat, but not as we know it."

No one has yet to taste the mammoth meatball, notes the report. "We haven't seen this protein for thousands of years," said Wolvetang. "So we have no idea how our immune system would react when we eat it. But if we did it again, we could certainly do it in a way that would make it more palatable to regulatory bodies."
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Meatball From Long-Extinct Mammoth Created By Food Firm

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Ethically safe long pig.
    • I remember one "defrosted frozen guy experiences severe future shock" SF story where one of the things the protagonist was hit with was exactly that (not a plot point, it was just an ad for it in the background). Can't remember what the exact title was, though.

      • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

        Was there a blowjob scene in Encino Man?

      • I remember one "defrosted frozen guy experiences severe future shock" SF story where one of the things the protagonist was hit with was exactly that (not a plot point, it was just an ad for it in the background). Can't remember what the exact title was, though.

        Not the exact scene but Sly has the right attitude: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

        No one has yet to taste the mammoth meatball, notes the report.

        So somebody didn't not taste it, or nobody didn't taste it? Which is it?

        I for one can't wait for these new burgers/nuggets. I'll be queuing up when they arrive.

  • What's for dinner?

  • by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2023 @09:21AM (#63408524) Homepage Journal
    the original McRib [fandom.com] is back on the menu!



    now we just need to make sure to keep listeria from getting into the grow-vats. details, details.
  • "No one has yet to taste the mammoth meatball"
  • Coming to a butcher shop near you.
  • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2023 @09:48AM (#63408590)
    Selling lab grown meat is a tough sell but the magic of celebrity branding can work miracles. It has worked time and time again for every product out there. After all, who could resist a slab of Taylor Swift rump steak grown from her very cells? https://www.genolve.com/design... [genolve.com]
  • Yes, the climate has been getting warmer for a while now. Or was it man made camp fires that warmed the climate on the Wooly Mammoths?
  • ...but I'd guess that human digestive systems are
    a) generally extraordinarily resilient and adaptable (unless you've /truly/ devolved into one of those new Homo Milquetoastus that are allergic to everything)
    b) on the whole actually evolving much more slowly than on a scale of 'thousands of years' anyway.

  • Mad Mammoth (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2023 @09:52AM (#63408608)
    How do they know they are not mass producing prions
  • by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Wednesday March 29, 2023 @09:54AM (#63408614)

    Or at least supposed to be a joke.

    I'm unsure on this one now that they're becoming real. Meat will taste and feel different depending on how the animal was raised, what it ate, its age, etc, as well as have different nutritional content/value.

    How does all that work out in these new technologies? They're always unclear in articles on this stuff.

    • Food vats, sorry, should have proofed that although food cats is an interesting option.

    • Just a guess but something like veal vs steak
    • I feel like those features are naturally at the higher end of the meat spectrum with whole cuts and varied textures.

      It seems like cultured meat with naturally displace the lowest end first because that is where things are more factory procudes and thus quality is in fact very consistent; My nugget or fast food burger is pretty much the same across the nation because those things are centrallyproduced and pretty much homogenized.

      As this tech matures over the decades I can also see places being able to focus

  • Ressurect cells from an extinct animal and instead of using them for proper science - lets make meatballs!

    If this were posted in 3 days time no one would believe it.

  • Serious question, do we really want to promote eating extinct animals?

    I mean, there's also an attempt to revive mammoths, so if we're already eating them would we immediately turn to herding and raising mammoths for food?

    • by dasunt ( 249686 )

      Serious question, do we really want to promote eating extinct animals?

      Why not? It's not like we'll drive the Dodo to extinction if we start eating vat-grown Dodo meat.

      About the only ethical consideration I can see is if vat grown meat must take more resources than conventional meat. I don't see that being the case, there's almost certainly more overhead in raising a cow for beef than growing it in the lab.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday March 29, 2023 @10:48AM (#63408776)

    That's why there are no mammoths left.

  • Changing a single gene in a sheep cell does not make this mammoth meat.
  • Let's hope the lab manufactured profile of available proteins, fats, carbs, vitamins, minerals, enzymes etc are similar to actual meat. Because the fake meat sold today made from pea powder, soybeans, sawdust or whatever provides next to no actual nutrition with compared with protoplasm and should not be eaten by anyone. Everyone raving about the taste is an idiot. They say arsenic has quite the piquant flavor, give that a try.
  • Could have been.... a bagel!

    Find out what happens when you put everything on a bagel...

  • I think you just gave Trump a new nickname for DeSantis!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Won't taste the same as spear hunted free-range mammoth.
  • I tried the Domino's Elephanteroni, Slow Loris, and Mutated Rat Sausage meat combo pizza. Better than expected. However now there's something weird growing out of my jawline. Is there supposed to be a clawed foot under my ear?

  • will be the only culture some people get

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