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  #1   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 00:44
Demi's Avatar
Demi Demi is offline
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Default The Fate of Food

Not low carb but will probably be of interest to some here:

Quote:
From The Times
London, UK
25 May, 2019

The Fate of Food by Amanda Little review — why we’ll be eating faux meat and algae

As global demand for food soars, what we eat is going to radically change, says Melanie Reid


The future of food is already for sale on Amazon. Soylent is an adult version of baby formula, a 400-calorie vegan beverage, nutritionally complete, which saves time, money and carbon footprint. “Proudly made with genetic engineering”, it says on the box. You could eat nothing else and thrive. The Silicon Valley geeks who created it envision a world of shortage in which Soylent is a civil resource, piped into your house through taps.

According to Amanda Little, an American environmental journalist and lover of good food, it tastes like a cross between almond milk and pancake batter — far from delicious, but oddly sating. And by 2050, with permanent drought, millions more mouths to be fed and fresh food beyond all but the rich, Soylent could be commonplace.

The single biggest threat of climate change, according to sombre experts, is the collapse of global food systems. In The Fate of Food Little explores how perilous the future is (very, it seems) and whether the West is prepared for the end of plenty (hardly). But she finds evidence that farmers, entrepreneurs and scientists are starting to radically rethink food — and billions of dollars of private investment is supporting them. “Food is ripe for reinvention,” said Bill Gates in 2014. Five years on, it’s under way.

n the US there’s a revolution afoot with farming robots, which recognise and remove weeds, deliver herbicide to individual plants and dramatically reduce chemical use. The inventor, a Silicon Valley engineer, has gone into partnership with the tractor giant John Deere, heralding an era of precision agriculture that could transform food production and upend the $250-billion agrochemical industry.

In China smog, drought, water rationing, polluted soil and counterfeit produce make feeding the country’s 1.4 billion people a struggle. Farmers use four times more agrochemicals then the US. The Chinese government is investing in indoor vertical farms, soil and chemical-free, where speed of growth and yield are 30 per cent faster than from soil. The Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is backing a San Francisco-based startup that by 2020 will have 300 such farms in Chinese cities, growing food hydroponically.

Aeroponic indoor farming, which grows vegetables with their roots dangling in air, fed by a nutrient-rich mist, is taking off too. Production in the US has jumped more than 60 per cent in the past decade. A company called AeroFarms, with investors from Sweden to Dubai, grows greens in climate-controlled warehouses around New York, shelves stacked into steel towers 40ft high under LED lights, monitored by computer sensors. The company is expanding into China, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. It’s also developing small indoor units for homes.

In Norway Mowi (formerly Marine Harvest), the world’s largest fishery, produces 1.5 billion farmed salmon a year. Its boss, Alf-Helge Aarskog, envisages a blue revolution by 2050 in which aquaculture, including tilapia, carp, catfish and barramundi farmed in Asia, will replace wild-caught fish and sustain billions of people. He points out that oceans are 70 per cent of the planet, but provide only 2 per cent of food.

To escape the blight of sea lice, the company is moving fish into cages called eggs, 150ft deep, made of white polymer, which are impervious to parasites and effectively the watery equivalent of the vertical farm: controlled, hyper-engineered, expensive. The company is also converting carnivorous salmon to vegetarianism, using pellets made from grains and omega-3 fatty acids sourced from algae. The aim is that holy grail: food produced from non-food.

I read this book on holiday in the Outer Hebrides, where the wild scallops on my plate were landed an hour or two earlier. The concept of hungry mega-metropolises seemed distant, but Little’s message is that organic riches and individual effort can never meet future needs. In the book she drops her antagonism to genetically modified food, accepting that tech is essential. As consumers, we are all going to have to get over what she calls the “ick factor” and understand that insect and algae protein, microwave vacuum drying (it preserves food in a state of shrunken chewiness), genetic modification and vegan meal replacements will play a part in diet.

For beef lovers, that means a new frontier of lab-grown and faux meat. Significantly, America’s biggest meat producers are investing in startups that may one day be a substitute for livestock production, responsible for 15 to 20 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions. Memphis Meats in California is growing in-vitro meat in the lab using tiny samples of muscle, fat and connective tissue from living animals. Cultured meat, identical at cellular level to animals (it spasms as if alive), reduces emissions by three quarters and water use by 90 per cent. Little tastes lab-grown duck: had it been dressed up and served to her in a restaurant, she says she wouldn’t know the difference. Consumers at large may try it for themselves relatively soon.

A substitute called Beyond Meat, made from soy and pea proteins, coloured with beet juices, is already widely on sale in America. Impossible Foods’ meatless hamburger, made with synthesised blood using soya beans, is a staple at fast-food outlets. It’s a safe bet that it will, with improvements, soon taste identical to a McDonald’s.

Meanwhile, the Wise Company, in Utah, annually doubles its sales of freeze-dried meals. First bought by survivalists, now the pouches are bought by mothers who never want their children to go hungry in the event of catastrophe. The Pentagon is developing food from 3D printers. Sensors on soldiers’ bodies will detect, say, a mineral deficit, then send the information to the printer, which would customise a food bar or pellets from flavoured liquid and powder. The technology is expected in the field by 2025.

Our concept of water must also change. The UN says Egypt will be in water crisis by 2025; by 2040 half of Iranians will need to relocate to escape drought. California and South Africa are critically dry. By 2030 India will need twice what it has. In Israel, however, they have reinvented water. They have a purple pipe network carrying recycled human waste — “poop water”, an enthusiastic Gates calls it — to flush toilets and wash clothes. A separate silver pipe network delivers premium water for drinking and washing. Israel has also, by investing in desalination plants, gone from water deficit to surplus. It can be done.

There’s a timely, positive, thought-provoking message here. It’s just a shame the book is hopelessly overwritten: 100 pages shorter, it would have had real punch. Little is bewilderingly prolix in her scene setting. Aarskog, for instance, has “thick, scowling eyebrows” and approaches the mission of lice eradication “with all the enthusiasm of Caddyshack’s Carl Spackler in his battle against the gophers”; and someone else is “Danny Ocean crossed with the affable Schneider from One Day at a Time”. It’s bad enough, to be honest, to drive me to vegan baby food.

The Fate of Food: What We’ll Eat in a Bigger, Hotter, Smarter World by Amanda Little

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fate-Food-.../dp/1786076454/
https://www.amazon.com/Fate-Food-Bi.../dp/1786076454/



https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/...eview-vzzbsxf9w
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  #2   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 07:53
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JLx JLx is offline
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Default

Fascinating. Thanks for posting!
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  #3   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 07:53
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teaser teaser is offline
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Default

That making soy taste like beef--if it really worked, you could make chicken beef-like, instead. Chicken is so much more efficient than beef to raise--that's why it's so much cheaper--that you get pretty much all the savings versus green house emissions etc. that you'd get from switching to soy--plus, and this is big for me, you don't actually have to eat soy. Blecch.
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  #4   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 11:12
CityGirl8 CityGirl8 is offline
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Default

I'm not anti-soy (completely), but it doesn't seem like the best way to go here. What happened to crickets? People eat insects like this around the world and don't even bother to ground them up in to flour like we do in North America. They're a great alternative and can be farmed in very little space.

Personally, I'm with grass-fed beef and sustainable farming though.
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  #5   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 11:25
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GRB5111 GRB5111 is offline
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Default

Again, major investments planned for new food production technology all based on unsound science. It doesn't matter that people cite "a majority of scientists" support climate change, as that was the case for the food pyramid, and back in the early 1900s, tobacco as a health aid. We have much to learn, and these romantic ideas are good and if implemented, appear to have many pros, but who is looking at the cons or the negative consequences of these actions when the seduction of massive revenue for investors is in play? The earth is a fragile place, so changing the growth medium of soil-base plants to air and water and expanding seafood farms plus eliminating what is considered "pests" (sea lice and other) usually doesn't consider the beneficial relationships (symbiosis) that exist today. I see many more needs for chemical treatment to simulate a healthy environment and the potential consequences of unanticipated negative effects. The food pyramid was once considered the single solution to good health. Will history continue to repeat itself? Seems likely.
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  #6   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 11:31
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cotonpal cotonpal is offline
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Plan: very low carb real food
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GRB5111
Again, major investments planned for new food production technology all based on unsound science. It doesn't matter that people cite "a majority of scientists" support climate change, as that was the case for the food pyramid, and back in the early 1900s, tobacco as a health aid. We have much to learn, and these romantic ideas are good and if implemented, appear to have many pros, but who is looking at the cons or the negative consequences of these actions when the seduction of massive revenue for investors is in play? The earth is a fragile place, so changing the growth medium of soil-base plants to air and water and expanding seafood farms plus eliminating what is considered "pests" (sea lice and other) usually doesn't consider the beneficial relationships (symbiosis) that exist today. I see many more needs for chemical treatment to simulate a healthy environment and the potential consequences of unanticipated negative effects. The food pyramid was once considered the single solution to good health. Will history continue to repeat itself? Seems likely.


It is in my view incredible arrogance to believe that "modern" science can solve the problems that previously "modern" people created believing that what they did was somehow for the common good. Arrogance, combined with greed, combined with willful ignorance is more like it. Soylent might be the wave of the future but that does not mean that the future is looking rosy.
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  #7   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 14:09
fred42 fred42 is offline
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Default

It is easy for even us low carb types to fall for the "meat is not sustainable" argument. An interesting talk by Dr. Peter Ballerstedt provides the opposite view that it is the "plant based" that is not sustainable.

Keto Salt Lake 2019 - 03 - Dr. Peter Ballerstedt: Getting to the meat of sustainability

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zemiuEwVpww&t=289s

A summary of his points copied from one of the slides in the Presentation slides link in the description:

1. Humans are heterotrophs. We must consume other organisms.

2. Animal products are superior sources of nutrition in the human diet.

3. Ruminant animal agriculture offers unique ecological advantages over other forms of food production.

4. There can be no sustainable agriculture without ruminants.

5. Ruminants are not competing with humans for resources.

6. Ruminants increase the quantity and quality of humanity’s food supply:
a. Animal protein is superior to plant “protein” in human nutrition.
b. Fats from animal products, especially from ruminants, are beneficial while
polyunsaturated fatty acids from plants have been shown to be harmful.
c. Minerals are more bio-available from animal sourced foods.
d. Providing essential nutrients unavailable from plant sourced foods.

7. Modern humans exist because of ruminants, modern societies depend upon them, and they will be essential to the future of humanity.

8. Estimates of ruminant animal agriculture’s environmental impact are typically overstated, over-simplified and misleading.
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  #8   ^
Old Sat, May-25-19, 16:23
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bluesinger bluesinger is offline
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Default

I doubt there is any real, unmodified corn left in the USA. That mean the cattle would eat the GMO corn. I'm trying to avoid that.

I'm with you, Teaser. Don't care for soy in any form. Matter of fact, had to give up soy sauce as it gives me migraine auras.
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  #9   ^
Old Sun, May-26-19, 06:24
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Bob-a-rama Bob-a-rama is offline
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Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by bluesinger
I doubt there is any real, unmodified corn left in the USA. That mean the cattle would eat the GMO corn. I'm trying to avoid that.
<...snip...>

Go 100% grass-fed beef. There is no need to send the steers to the food lot, except to make more money for the rancher.

Cattle are not supposed to eat corn (actually a fruit, not a grain). It's not good for the cattle's health (but at that stage it doesn't matter) and the meat is not as good for us.

After eating corn the meat has more omega 6 fat and less omega 3 - we humans eat too much 6 and not enough 3. Plus grass-fed beef has CLA (conjugated linoleic acid) which helps us lose weight, corn fed beef does not.

And when the propagandists tell us how bad beef is for the environment, they are factoring in the zillions of acres of GMO, over-fertilized, over watered, over herbicided corn needed for the feed lots.

Resist the propaganda and expose it every appropriate chance you get. Growing crops on prairie land is much worse for the environment than letting cows graze on it. The culprit is the corn, and it's easy to avoid if you choose 100% grass-fed beef.


Bobby
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  #10   ^
Old Sun, May-26-19, 07:34
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doreen T doreen T is offline
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Just a reminder to please keep the discussion on-topic about food supply, and to avoid diverting arguments into disallowed areas such as population control (a.k.a. hijacking). Please see our policy on this matter .. Why politics, religion and other contentious topics are not permitted at Active Low-Carber Forums.

Quote:
].....

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