Bistro in Vitro is a virtual restaurant serving the artificial meat dishes of the future
Dutch artist and philosopher Koert Mensvoort has launched a virtual restaurant
featuring a menu of conceptual dishes that could be made possible by
lab-grown meat – including knitted mince, a cocktail made from meat foam
and sausages grown from living pets.
Launched last week, the Bistro in Vitro
website offers virtual diners "food for thought" by allowing them to
create their own three-course meal from a range of dishes that could one
day be created using "in vitro" meat.
The aim of the project is to encourage a wider audience to engage with
possibilities created by growing meat from cells in a controlled
environment using tissue-engineering technologies.
Meat fruit
As virtual diners select their meals on the site, their choices and
feedback, combined with interviews with chefs, will also contribute to a
documentary about attitudes to artificially-grown meat.
Meat oysterKoert Mensvoort worked
with a range of chefs, designers and students to develop concepts for
the dishes, which were recreated as life-like models either using real
meat, 3D printing or more traditional modelling materials like clay,
before being filmed and photographed for the site.
Celebrity cubes
Options on the menu include Celebrity Cubes – cubes of meat grown
using cell samples from famous personalities – animal-friendly foie gras
and a writhing tentacled meat product called the Throat Tickler, which
is described as occupying "the grey area between a sea anemone and a sex
toy".
Painless foie gras "My personal favourite is called A Pig From The Backyard and the idea
is that you have a little pig in the backyard or on the farm, and you
take some cells from it and you grow a local sausage from it," Mensvoort
told Dezeen. "You can feed the sausage to your child and then the next
day you can go out and the pig is still there, alive and well, and you
can cuddle it."
Throat tickler
"It's not too spectacular but it will change our consumptive
relationship with animals," he explained. "Right now we know so little
about the animals that are involved in our meat production, and it would
be great to eat meat from an animal that is still alive and well." See-through sushi
Among the other concepts created for the project are see-through
slices of "sushi" and meat pearls – soft spheres of a meat-like product
that would offer an entirely new combination of flavour and texture. Lab gravy pearls
"It doesn't relate to an animal at all, but it would taste better
than the best sushi you've ever had," said Mensvoort. "I think that's
interesting, that you can actually provide the new technology with its
own authenticity in a way." Knitted meat
Scientists have been working on developing processes for growing meat
as an answer to feeding a rapidly growing population and unsustainable
farming techniques. In August 2013, a lab-grown burger created by a team
of Dutch scientists was cooked and eaten in a public demonstration. Origami meat
"I noticed that most of the scientists who are working on it, and
some of them I know very well, they typically want to make the same
hamburgers, sausages and steaks that we already know and they try to
copy that with this new technology," said Mensvoort. Pig in the garden
"My question was, OK, so you have a new technology and you think
we're going to just grow the same products? That's not going to happen." Bone pickers
Mensvoort previously worked in a research capacity at Eindhoven
University and consulted with scientists to work out how realistic it
might be to actually make the dishes on his menu. Dodo nuggets
All of the meals in Bistro in Vitro are ranked using a star system,
with five stars representing products that are possible to create using
the artificial meat technology today, down to one star, which indicates
ideas that are unlikely to be achieved within the next couple of
decades. In Vitro ice cream
"Mark Post, the Dutchman who made the hamburger, he is trying to get
the price down to about €60 per kilo in the next five to six years and
then it's still expensive meat but it could find its place on the
market," said Mensvoort. "Right now it's still in the research phase but
there are people working on it to make it more affordable." Marrow egg
Bistro in Vitro was produced in collaboration with Dutch digital movie company Submarine Channel and the Next Nature Network,
an open source website that focuses on "nature caused by people", for
which Mensvoort is creative director. It follows on from a cookbook Mensvoort produced a year ago on the same theme. Magic meatballs
Mensvoort hopes the project will encourage a wider dialogue about the future of our food system.
Home incubator
"It is a restaurant where we strictly serve food for thought, because the dishes are too expensive to make," he told Dezeen.
"But still I think it's valuable because more people need to be
involved in this discussion on what we will eat in the future. So that's
also the goal, to make potential in vitro meat futures very tangible
and show it to people and then ask them which ones they actually want."
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