#plantbasedfood

IKEA is 3D Printing (Plant-Based) MeatballsIKEA is launching a “Taste The Future” recruitment campaign that invites the best and brightest minds to create a better everyday life for many people.The campaign will incorporate its world-famous Swedish meatballs. IKEA is inviting potential recruits to bring their ideas and try some experimental plant-based meatballs prepared with a food 3D printer. As part of reinventing themselves into a more sustainable future, IKEA is utilizing technology to offer a new, plant-based alternative to their famous menu. The initiative is part of their commitment to offer 50% plant-based main meals in IKEA restaurants by 2025.To achieve this, they are actively looking for data scientists, future architects, cyber guardians, unboxed engineers, and common sense-makers to join their team. The campaign launched with a “Taste The Future” short film, showcasing plant-based meatballs created by 3D printers programmed to replicate the texture, flavor, and appearance of a traditional IKEA meatball.#IKEA #3Dprinting #meatball #swedishmeatball #3DPrinter #vegetarian #plantbasedfood
3D-Printed "Meat Alternative" Made from Plant Cuts Just Like SteakDoes it taste good, though?Meet Redefine Meat, a meat alternative startup from Israel. The company creates a meat alternative for people who avoid meat in their diet with the help of a 3D printer. Redefine Meat’s alternative is a mix of soy and pea protein, chickpeas, beetroot, nutritional yeasts and coconut fat. Where does the 3D printer come in? Well, they employ the device to mold the mixture into steak-like shapes. According to Inside Edition, the startup’s plant steak is designed to act, taste, and cut like the regular meat we all know and love. #meatalternative #plantbasedfood #meat #3dprinting #food