Further
Guy
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- Sep 20, 2008
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Scientists just made the first test tube burger and a couple people got to eat it. Right now, it's fat free and has an odd texture, but it is an interesting look into a possible future.
Cows are very hard on the environment, take up a lot of room and produce shit loads of methane, perhaps this is the future. Not yet, at over 300K per burger it's not going to be on the dollar menu anytime soon. But technology like this does seem to progress fast, especially if there is an industrial use for it. I wouldn't be surprised to see TT burgers that taste identical to cow burgers at a very affordable cost in 10-15 years.
Would you try one now? Would you eat them once they get the kinks worked out and they taste identical? Would you prefer a TT burger or a Cow burger if they were identical in every way (taste, texture, cost)?
http://news.yahoo.com/first-reaction-lab-made-burger-134553131.html
Cows are very hard on the environment, take up a lot of room and produce shit loads of methane, perhaps this is the future. Not yet, at over 300K per burger it's not going to be on the dollar menu anytime soon. But technology like this does seem to progress fast, especially if there is an industrial use for it. I wouldn't be surprised to see TT burgers that taste identical to cow burgers at a very affordable cost in 10-15 years.
Would you try one now? Would you eat them once they get the kinks worked out and they taste identical? Would you prefer a TT burger or a Cow burger if they were identical in every way (taste, texture, cost)?
http://news.yahoo.com/first-reaction-lab-made-burger-134553131.html
