Submitted by sleepysnowboarder t3_12684u8 in worldnews
Comments
Spartanfred104 t1_je85749 wrote
The future is amazing, we can now synthesis the meat of extinct animals and slather it in bbq sauce.
FamiGami t1_je87h8l wrote
No we can’t. This isn’t meat from the animal at all. Gotta love the downvotes from all the people who think this meat came from an animal!
Elias_The_Thief t1_je8fpt9 wrote
That's why he used the word synthesize.
FamiGami t1_jea6334 wrote
Again, the crux here is the word animal. It isn’t synthesize from an animal at all. It’s from the dna of an animal. The resulting meat is an approximation and wouldn’t remotely resemble the meat from a living, grazing animal. Literally the difference between spam and a steak.
Elias_The_Thief t1_jeahuhc wrote
It doesn't really matter how good or bad it is, it is still a synthetic attempt at creating that meat. The comment you responded to never said from an animal. They said 'synthesize the meat of extinct animals'. You're arguing against a point that was never made.
FamiGami t1_jecx9j9 wrote
The point is whether it is meat at all if there is no animal. It’s synthetic by definition hence it cannot be meat by definition.
Revrak t1_jeasn9l wrote
You mixed “of the animal” with “from the animal” you’re the only one using the latter
FamiGami t1_jecxd18 wrote
It is neither of nor from the animal - there is no animal. Other commenters have agreed to as much. It’s synthetic hence it is not meat.
Revrak t1_jecyxrd wrote
you seem to have a different understanding of what makes something part of a group ie meat or not meat.
once it's a piece of meat the distinction has no difference. if it was not meat you'd be able to make a distinction.
if we were able to synthesize human organs they would not be human organs to you because they did not originate from a human. beyond the use there is little difference between that example and synthesized muscles of cattle or whatever.
You might have a point if you argued that it's not authentic because it lacks somethig present in "real" meat. but even then it might be and advantage (eg less veins or less fascia in the tissues to make it tender)
FamiGami t1_jeewit3 wrote
I did make that point. I already pointed out that there was no grazing animal, no input of naturally ingested vitamins and material, not natural exercising of the muscle, no “life experience”. There was no animal so it is not meat. It is a synthetic simulation of meat. That is all.
MegaJoltik t1_je8oevo wrote
No one say the meat is from animal.
>stressing the biggest difference is that they were not creating actual animals.
FamiGami t1_jea5qib wrote
I replied to spartan NOT the article.
Dry-Peach-6327 t1_je83zvy wrote
Where’s the spaghetti 🤌🤌🤌
Transfer_McWindow t1_je8a2wy wrote
I don't mean to alarm you, but you seem to have three hands.
Dry-Peach-6327 t1_je8bzm2 wrote
I ate too much uranium as a child
phlogistonical t1_je8uu82 wrote
How much is enough? Now Im worried my children have a uranium deficiency.
GodsCloaca t1_je9nceu wrote
Just gotta dilute it with lots of spaghetti.
Dry-Peach-6327 t1_je9pqdk wrote
Don’t forget the Parmesan cheese!
faygit1 t1_jea3xqr wrote
How could they forget the Parmesan cheese silly? That’s arguably the most important part in the uranium dilution process.
Transfer_McWindow t1_je9wcp1 wrote
All we had was asbestos growing up 😒
ancalime9 t1_je9g6zy wrote
One of them was made with wooly mammoth DNA
kittiestkitty t1_je95gs5 wrote
One is his cloned meatball hand
Rickshanchez90 t1_je84ad1 wrote
Meatwad comes to mind ATHF
Dangerous_Nitwit t1_je82rsq wrote
Finally! A meatball worthy of that really long spaghetti in Lady and the Tramp.
Vegan_Honk t1_je85bxd wrote
Please do cultured and lab grown meat and dairy.
greedydita t1_je84ilb wrote
“Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.”
Natural_Artifact t1_je8j1xr wrote
and since yesterday 29/03/2023 italian gov. banned the production and the consumption of Lab Meat , so WTF I HAVE TO TRAVEL TO AN OTHER COUNTRY TO EAT MAMMOTH !!!! fuck you Ita Gov.
autotldr t1_je82f82 wrote
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 79%. (I'm a bot)
> The meatball was created by Australian cultured meat company Vow, which - promising this was not an April Fools' joke - said it wanted to get people talking about cultured meat, calling it a more sustainable alternative for real meat.
> While creating cultured meat usually means using blood of a dead calf, Vow used an alternative, meaning no animals were killed in the making of the mammoth meatball.
> Vow hopes to put cultured meat on the map in the European Union, a market where such meat as food is not regulated yet.
Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: meat^#1 Vow^#2 animal^#3 mammoth^#4 meatball^#5
Boondala t1_je840j0 wrote
Who will be first to put that in their mouth??
GodsCloaca t1_je9neoi wrote
I hope it's the last too. Not sanitary to pass around taste test meatballs.
PM_ME_UR_CREDDITCARD t1_jeeg5yn wrote
Cut it into bits and share.
Puttanesca621 t1_je8hkw8 wrote
If they can somehow lock down heirloom fries and master buffalo shakes to add to this meatwad they sure could be number one in da hood.
Maxamillion-X72 t1_je8nju7 wrote
>While creating cultured meat usually means using blood of a dead calf, Vow used an alternative, meaning no animals were killed in the making of the mammoth meatball.
"no animals were killed"
AmericanSwampApe t1_je9cgre wrote
Humans are animals.
Art_Is_A_Confession t1_je83p2j wrote
Franken Food
openly_gray t1_je8bx2e wrote
Mammoth meat ball made with mammoth DNA - so clever
Drspaceman1717 t1_jebvhv4 wrote
Not exactly. This has one single gene of a mammoth and the rest is DNA of modern elephant.
SiofraRiver t1_jedfhyy wrote
That's disappointing.
[deleted] t1_je8j28b wrote
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striker69 t1_je8qbt5 wrote
Looking forward to some tasty Sabre Tooth Tiger over rice.
Szambodi t1_je8r1z2 wrote
nah, i'm good!
EvenHair4706 t1_je8s067 wrote
Looks like my next door neighbor
[deleted] t1_je91net wrote
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GforceDz t1_je92fjd wrote
Ok sure I would love to taste mammoth but I doubt it's much better than elephant and that's not the greatest meat.
But it does raise some interesting questions like, they could make human meatballs too.
Would you taste a human meatball?
What if you liked it?
Active_Advertising_9 t1_je9w5gv wrote
Cultured human meat has already been done.
raspberry-cream-pi t1_je92ncj wrote
I'm looking forward to lab-grown meats of fictional animals. Dragon burger, anyone?
sees7seas t1_je9jr80 wrote
Here's a thought, why don't they just donate some DNA (human) and process it as they did in a culture, then make a meatball, then put that out for a taste test....because we can??? Would you try it?
Active_Advertising_9 t1_je9w77d wrote
It's already been done.
Flower_Murderer t1_je8hk8r wrote
If it's not a sausage, I'm not interested.
olivethunderer t1_je8lg7z wrote
Waste of brainpower.
ProfessionalHour3213 t1_je8obhh wrote
Its advertising, they are trying to bring back the mammoth and one company says they will have their first at 2027. They want to introduce it back in to the wild, this would be a huge step forward in science.
Tamariz79 t1_je81h2g wrote
What