The truth about meat!!!

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plasticluvr

Gym climber
ft lauderdale fl
Topic Author's Original Post - Nov 5, 2013 - 10:07pm PT
About 80 percent of the world’s farmland is used to support the meat and poultry industries, and much of that goes to growing animal feed. An efficient use of resources this is not. For example, a single pound of cooked beef, a family meal’s worth of hamburgers, requires 298 square feet of land, 27 pounds of feed, and 211 gallons of water.

Supplying meat not only devours resources but also creates waste. That same pound of hamburger requires more than 4,000 Btus of fossil-fuel energy to get to the dinner table; something has to power the tractors, feedlots, slaughterhouses, and trucks. That process, along with the methane the cows belch throughout their lives, contributes as much as 51 percent of all greenhouse gas produced in the world.
pud

climber
Sportbikeville & Yucca brevifolia
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:12pm PT
OMG !!!

I'm having fish tonight.
Dr.Sprock

Boulder climber
I'm James Brown, Bi-atch!
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:14pm PT
provides jobs for heart surgeons also,
Spider Savage

Mountain climber
The shaggy fringe of Los Angeles
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:16pm PT
If God did not want us to eat animals why did he make them out of meat?
plasticluvr

Gym climber
ft lauderdale fl
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 5, 2013 - 10:16pm PT
Traditional chicken, beef, and pork production devours resources and creates waste. Meat-free meat might be the solution.
jstan

climber
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:18pm PT
P/L:

Nice first effort. Since someone will say it, maybe I can. Where you can it is a good idea to include links to data sources. Links are wonderfully easy to follow up.

I trust you know what you are getting into here.

If God did not want us to eat animals why did he make them out of meat?

God also made animals to eat us. That's why we are made of meat.
jonnyrig

Trad climber
formerly known as hillrat
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:20pm PT
Huh, I'm having elk tonight. Yesterday was fish. I caught the fish, I killed the elk, neither involved a slaughterhouse, hormones, antibiotics, or nearly as many wasted BTU's as quoted.

The truth about the world: technology has outpaced good sense, and there's just too damn many people. Some day technology will fail us, and the number of people will shrink dramatically.
RyanD

climber
Squamish
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:22pm PT
So u love plastic but don't like meat?
johntp

Trad climber
socal
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:23pm PT
Let's harness those methane beltches to produce power and go get a burger.

Do you really think harvesting of veggies has no environmental impact? Agreed that if we all lived on farms and grew our own food the world would be better. That is just not practical given our urban lifestyle.

I like to eat meat. You are a veggie. Let's think about it. If all meat eaters went veggie what would be the impact? The need for protein substances would transition from animals to plants. Are those plants going to magically appear with no environmental impact? Fertilizer comes from where? Processing of the veggies requires water which requires other resources It is all a trade off. There is no free lunch.
jonnyrig

Trad climber
formerly known as hillrat
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:24pm PT
I forgot to mention the home-grown veggies, 'cause you know... commercial veggies only have about half the nutrients due to overuse of the soil they're grown in and use of artificial fertilizer instead of good old compost.
jonnyrig

Trad climber
formerly known as hillrat
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:26pm PT
Maybe the real argument is "don't kill animals".
plasticluvr

Gym climber
ft lauderdale fl
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 5, 2013 - 10:26pm PT
A 2012 study at the University of Exeter in the U.K. calculated the degree to which diets must change in order to feed the world in 2050 and stave off catastrophic climate change. The researchers found that average global meat consumption would have to decrease from 16.6 percent of average daily calorie intake to 15 percent. That may not sound like much, but it translates to roughly halving the amount of meat in Western diets—a major change, but conceivable with high-quality meat alternatives.
jstan

climber
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:27pm PT
J/R:
ST then will solve our artificial fertilizer problem?
ß Î Ř T Ç H

Boulder climber
extraordinaire
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:34pm PT
Song from Meat is Murder album ...[Click to View YouTube Video]
johntp

Trad climber
socal
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:36pm PT
A 2012 study at the University of Exeter in the U.K. calculated the degree to which diets must change in order to feed the world in 2050 and stave off catastrophic climate change. The researchers found that average global meat consumption would have to decrease from 16.6 percent of average daily calorie intake to 15 percent. That may not sound like much, but it translates to roughly halving the amount of meat in Western diets—a major change, but conceivable with high-quality meat alternatives.

And where will the protein source come from and what are the impacts?
jonnyrig

Trad climber
formerly known as hillrat
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:40pm PT
Fertilizer problem? With all the B.S.? Nah... just take the laptop out to the garden with ya... Voila!

Oh, and eat less meat to prevent global warming? Don't you know global warming's a hoax?
http://www.supertopo.com/climbers-forum/970221/Climate-Change-skeptics-ot
Toker Villain

Big Wall climber
Toquerville, Utah
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:48pm PT
They aren't spree killers/ mass murderers.

They are just woefully misunderstood environmental activists.
plasticluvr

Gym climber
ft lauderdale fl
Topic Author's Reply - Nov 5, 2013 - 10:54pm PT

Okay , Just saying cutting down on meat or eating fake meat could just save the planet!


Can Artificial Meat Save The World?



Traditional chicken, beef, and pork production devours resources and creates waste. Meat-free meat might be the solution.
By Tom Foster Posted 10.28.2013 at 12:55 pm
5
The Meat Lab Brian Klutch
On an ordinary spring morning in Columbia, Missouri, Ethan Brown stands in the middle of an ordinary kitchen tearing apart a chicken fajita strip. “Look at this,” he says. “It’s amazing!” Around him, a handful of stout Midwestern food-factory workers lean in and nod approvingly. “I’m just so proud of it.”

The meat Brown is pulling apart looks normal enough: beige flesh that separates into long strands. It would not be out of place in a chicken salad or Caesar wrap. Bob Prusha, a colleague of Brown’s, stands over a stove sautéing a batch for us to eat. But the meat Brown is fiddling with and Prusha is frying is far from ordinary. It’s actually not meat at all.

Brown is the CEO of Beyond Meat, a four-year-old company that manufactures a meat substitute made mainly from soy and pea proteins and amaranth. Mock meat is not a new idea. Grocery stores are full of plant-based substitutes—the Boca and Gardenburgers of the world, not to mention Asian staples like tofu and seitan. What sets Beyond Meat apart is how startlingly meat-like its product is. The “chicken” strips have the distinct fibrous structure of poultry, and they deliver a similar nutritional profile. Each serving has about the same amount of protein as an equivalent portion of chicken, but with zero cholesterol or saturated and trans fats.

To Brown, there is little difference between his product and the real thing. Factory-farmed chickens aren’t really treated as animals, he says; they’re machines that transform vegetable inputs into chicken breasts. Beyond Meat simply uses a more efficient production system. Where one pound of cooked boneless chicken requires 7.5 pounds of dry feed and 30 liters of water, the same amount of Beyond Meat requires only 1.1 pound of ingredients and two liters of water.

The ability to efficiently create meat, or something sufficiently meat-like, will become progressively more important in coming years because humanity may be reaching a point when there’s not enough animal protein to go around. The United Nations expects the global population to grow from the current 7.2 billion to 9.6 billion by 2050. Also, as countries such as China and India continue to develop, their populations are adopting more Western diets. Worldwide the amount of meat eaten per person nearly doubled from 1961 to 2007, and the UN projects it will double again by 2050.

In other words, the planet needs to rethink how it gets its meat. Brown is addressing the issue by supplying a near-perfect meat analogue, but he is not alone in reinventing animal products. Just across town, Modern Meadow uses 3-D printers and tissue engineering to grow meat in a lab. The company already has a refrigerator full of lab-grown beef and pork; in fact, the company’s co-founder, Gabor Forgacs, fried and ate a piece of engineered pork onstage at a 2011 TED talk. Another scientist, Mark Post at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, is also using tissue engineering to produce meat in a lab. In August, he served an entire lab-grown burger to two diners on a London stage as a curious but skeptical crowd looked on.

Chicken-Free Strips It took more than two decades to create a vegetable-based meat analogue with a consistency and texture similar to chicken; Whole Foods began selling the packaged Beyond Meat product in spring. Courtesy Beyond Meat
Revolutions tend to appear revolutionary only from a distance, and as Brown walks me to the production floor, I’m struck by how similar the Beyond Meat factory looks to any other. Nondescript metal machinery churns away. Ingredients sit in plastic bulk-foods bins. We put on hairnets and white coats and walk over to a small blue conveyor belt, where Brown’s chicken strips emerge from the machinery cooked and in oddly rectilinear form. They are not yet seasoned, he says, but they are ready to eat. At the end of the conveyor belt, the still-steaming strips fall unceremoniously into a steel bucket, where they land with a dull thud.
Staring at the bucketful of precooked strips, it’s hard to imagine a future in which meat is, by necessity, not meat. Or in which meat is grown in a manufacturing facility instead of a field or feedlot. But that future is fast approaching, and here in the heart of Big Ag country, both Beyond Meat and Modern Meadow are confronting it head on.

Each year, Americans eat more than 200 pounds of meat per person, and mid-Missouri is as good a place as any to see what it takes to satisfy that appetite. Columbia sits dead center in the state, so approaching on I-70 from either direction means driving about two hours past huge tracts of farmland—soy, corn, and wheat fields and herds of grazing cattle. Giant truck stops glow on the horizon, and mile-long trains tug boxcars loaded with grain to places as far away as Mexico and California.

Beyond Meat Factory in Columbia, Missouri, food scientists transform a mix of soy and pea proteins and amaranth into “chicken” strips. Courtesy Beyond Meat
It’s rich country that for nearly 150 years has fed the nation and the world. Yet most of the crops grown around Columbia will never land on dining-room tables but rather in giant feedlot troughs. That’s not unusual. About 80 percent of the world’s farmland is used to support the meat and poultry industries, and much of that goes to growing animal feed. An efficient use of resources this is not. For example, a single pound of cooked beef, a family meal’s worth of hamburgers, requires 298 square feet of land, 27 pounds of feed, and 211 gallons of water.

Supplying meat not only devours resources but also creates waste. That same pound of hamburger requires more than 4,000 Btus of fossil-fuel energy to get to the dinner table; something has to power the tractors, feedlots, slaughterhouses, and trucks. That process, along with the methane the cows belch throughout their lives, contributes as much as 51 percent of all greenhouse gas produced in the world.

To understand how humans developed such a reliance on meat, it’s useful to start at the beginning. Several million years ago, hominids had large guts and smaller brains. That began to reverse around two million years ago: Brains got bigger as guts got smaller. The primary reason for the change, according to a seminal 1995 study by evolutionary anthropologist Leslie Aiello, then of the University College London, is that our ancestors started eating meat, a compact, high-energy source of calories. With meat, hominids did not need to maintain a large, energy-intense digestive system. Instead, they could divert energy elsewhere, namely to power big energy-hungry brains. And with those brains, they changed the world.

As time progressed, meat became culturally important too. Hunting fostered cooperation; cooking and eating the kill brought communities together over shared rituals—as it still does in backyard barbecues. Neal Barnard, a nutrition author and physician at George Washington University, argues that today the cultural appeal of meat trumps any physiological benefits. “We have known for a long time that people who don’t eat meat are thinner and healthier and live longer than people who do,” he says. Nutritionally, meat is a good source of protein, iron, and vitamin B12, but Barnard says those nutrients are easily available from other sources that aren’t also heavy in saturated fats. “For the millennia of our sojourn on Earth, we have been getting more than enough protein from entirely plant-based sources. The cow gets its protein that way and simply rearranges it into muscle. People say, ‘Gee if I don’t eat muscle, where will I get protein?’ You get it from the same place the cow got it.”

To Barnard, the simple conclusion is that everyone should stick to eating plants—and he’s right that it would be a far more efficient use of all that cropland. And yet to most people, meat tastes good. Studies suggest that eating meat activates the brain’s pleasure center in much the same way chocolate does. Even many vegetarians say bacon smells great when it’s cooking. For whatever reason, most people simply love to eat meat—myself included. And that makes
re-creating it, whether from vegetables or cells in a lab, exceedingly difficult.

* * *
In the mid-1980s, a food scientist named Fu-hung Hsieh moved to Columbia, Missouri, to start a food-engineering program at the University of Missouri. Hsieh was coming to academia from a successful career in the processed-foods industry, at Quaker Oats, and he convinced the university to buy him a commercial-grade extrusion machine, nearly unheard of in an academic setting.

Modern Meadow Modern Meadow grows beef and pork cells in heated incubator Courtesy Modern Meadow
An extruder is one of the processed-food industry’s most important and versatile pieces of equipment, the invention responsible for Froot Loops and Cheetos and premade cookie dough. Dry and wet ingredients are poured into a hopper on one end of the machine and a rotating auger pushes them through a long barrel, where they are subjected to varying levels of heat and pressure. At the barrel’s end, the ingredients pass through a die that forms them into whatever shape and texture the machine has been programmed to produce. The mixture emerges at the far end as a continuous ribbon of food, which is sliced into the desired portions.

On one level, an extruder is a simple piece of technology—something like a giant sausage maker—but producing the desired result can be devilishly complicated. “Some people say extrusion cooking is an art form,” says Harold Huff, a meat-loving Missouri native who works with Hsieh as a senior research specialist. Around 1989, Hsieh and Huff took an interest in using the extruder to make the first realistic meat analogue. “We didn’t worry about flavor or anything else,” Hsieh tells me. “We wanted it to tear apart like chicken—it was all just about initial appearance.” They knew there wasn’t a single physical or chemical adjustment that would bring about a solution. They just had to experiment. “You have to have the right ingredients, the right temperature, the right hardware,” Huff says. “You try things, make observations, and make adjustments” for years, even decades. And so it went, until Ethan Brown came calling in 2009.

Brown, a vegan environmentalist, had been working for a fuel-cell company and had become frustrated by his colleagues’ ignorance of meat’s role in climate change. “We would go to conferences and sit there wringing our hands over all these [energy] issues, and then we’d go to dinner and people would order huge steaks,” he says. “I was like, ‘This is stupid, I want to go work on that problem.’ ” To the ridicule of old friends, who joked that he was moving to the country to start a tofu factory, he started poring over journal articles and casting around for meat analogues to market—which is how he heard about Hsieh’s work.

Brown licensed the veggie chicken and began fine-tuning it with the scientists for mass consumption. “If we used too much soy, it was too firm, and if we reduced it too much, it became soft, like tofu,” Brown remembers. “It took us two years to figure that out, and it’s still not perfect.”

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TwistedCrank

climber
Bungwater Hollow, Ida-ho
Nov 5, 2013 - 10:56pm PT
If it doesn't have meat in it, it's a snack.
jonnyrig

Trad climber
formerly known as hillrat
Nov 5, 2013 - 11:09pm PT
Actually, if you can do it, kudos to you. Thanks to some prodding by my environmentally-aware significant other I've managed to cut my fast-food intake by probably 75%. The majority of meat I eat now is organic. We stay with the environmentally "friendly" fish.

Are you vegan? Are you vegetarian? Congratulations! That takes dedication.

Good luck changing the rest of the world, you're gonna need it.
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