Jun 4, 2021
Between the latest online fads and the crazy media headlines,
it’s easier than ever
to get confused about your health. If you want to make better
decisions about your health today
so you can feel better and live longer, you’ve come to the right
place.
Humans eat meat. Right or wrong, the fact is that over 92% of
individuals from most cultures
around the world consume meat on a daily basis, regardless of the
environmental,
humanitarian, and global quality of life impacts that this diet
entails.
But what if we could eat meat without raising animals? Meat
alternatives offer animal protein
without the animals. Whether you call it clean meat, cell-based
meat, or cultured meat, these
new options have the potential to disrupt the meat industry by
offering products that are sterile
and safe at a fraction of the environmental impact.
I’m joined today by Dr. Elliot Swartz, Ph.D. — a senior scientist
at the Good Food Institute, a
company that is pushing meat alternative research and technology
forward — to discuss the
defining characteristics of cultivated meat and how stem cell
biology and tissue engineering
have made it possible to grow cells without having to slaughter an
animal. With a background as
a cellular and molecular neuroscientist, Dr. Swartz understands why
the world needs meat
alternatives more than ever before, and he shares the exciting
research that is making the
possibility of meat alternatives in supermarkets and restaurants
more of a reality than ever
before.
Key Takeaways:
[1:08] Today’s topic is meat alternatives — what they are and why
the world needs them more
than ever before.
[2:49] Why is there a need for meat alternatives? The answer starts
with facts about industrial
animal agriculture, biodiversity law and antibiotics.
[5:17] How stem cell biology and tissue engineering have made it
possible to grow cells without
having to slaughter an animal and the correct way to define
cultivated meat.
[8:20] A look at how cultivated meat fits into the meat alternative
spectrum and some of the
specifics of the methodology behind each type of cultivated
meat.
[11:01] The process of cultivating meat — from taking a cell biopsy
sample to the lab to
producing stem cells that can create sausage or chicken breasts —
and the differences
between stem cells and fully grown animal tissue.
[15:33] The animal that stem cell tissue is taken from does not
need to be genetically modified,
meaning the entire meat cultivation process can be GMO-free.
[16:37] Why would a neuroscientist be interested in food? Dr.
Swartz shares the education and
lab experiences that led him to the food industry and how working
at The Good Food Institute
has encouraged him to become flexitarian.
[23:29] How can researchers grow large volume meat alternatives
in a sterile environment
without antibiotics, and what does that mean for the safety of the
product and the health of the
everyday consumer?
[27:19] Dr. Swartz predicts when meat alternatives are going to hit
the shelf based on global
rules and regulations and the potential for reducing environmental
impacts by creating
sustainable meat alternatives.
[32:04] From a thermodynamic perspective, the possibilities that
come with producing meat
alternatives are massive when decreasing the animal caloric
feed-to-outcome ratio.
[33:22] Additional animal alternatives that may disrupt the meat
industry are currently being
researched, including the production of leather and gelatin.
[34:52] Resources to learn more about the meat alternative
industries.
[37:11] Do you have a topic you’d like me to cover? Contact me on
Facebook or Instagram
using #medicalmyths.
To learn more:
www.drchristianson.com
Dr.
Christianson on Instagram
Dr.
Christianson on Facebook
The Good Food Institute -
https://gfi.org/
Tweetables:
“Industrial animal agriculture has a lot of different negative
externalities associated with it, and
producing meat in a different way can mitigate a lot of these
problems.” — Dr. Elliot Swartz
“Generally cultivated meat offers a 1- to 2- caloric equivalent to
produce one calorie of meat.
The efficiency gains there are massive.” — Dr. Elliot Swartz
“Not only is the meat industry being disrupted by these
technologies, but the meat by-product
industry is being disrupted as well.” — Dr. Elliot Swartz
“I hope someday my son will tell his grandchildren that we ate
animals for food and we drove
our own cars.” — Dr. Christianson