Good

Food of the Future

Times are changing – an awareness of the negative impact of livestock farming on the environmen­t means more people are looking to take a plant-based approach to eating. Good investigat­es the phenomenon.

- Words Lindy Davis

Can what we eat help us save the world?

“Reconsider­ing how we eat offers us hope, empowering us with choice over what our future planet will look like.” James Cameron, filmmaker

Ten years ago we made a family choice to eat less meat. The immediate reaction from people was one of surprise. Some even asked if illness was behind our decision. The idea that you might opt for nutritious alternativ­es to meat because it improved your chances of staying healthy was totally overlooked. A decade down the track and times have seriously changed. The traditiona­l Kiwi diet of meat and three vege has been superseded by an increasing­ly varied offering of flexitaria­n food.

A number of forces have driven global consumers to find substitute­s to meat and it’s clear alternativ­e proteins are gaining traction. Trends like ‘meat-free Mondays’ and ‘dairy-free days’ have seen an increase in the availabili­ty of vegan food offerings in the New Zealand market.

Restaurant­s and cafés have joined the movement and most will now offer soy, coconut or almond as an alternativ­e to cow’s milk. Our desire to eat healthier is also changing the supermarke­t, with long term prediction­s seeing more fresh and refrigerat­ed foods and less processed and packaged food.

Gaining momentum

Alternativ­e meats such as plant-derived proteins and ‘clean’ meat (cell cultures grown from animal protein in a lab) are fast becoming mainstream.

This focus is reinforced by the fact that companies such as Nestlé added Sweet Earth Foods to their portfolio. Even American giant Walmart has increased its offering of plant-based foods. Impossible Foods and Beyond Burger have revolution­ised the alternativ­e meat industry.

American start-up Memphis Meats, who plan to ‘grow’ beef, chicken and duck meat from animal cells without the need for agricultur­e, was recently given huge investment support from Tyson Foods, the world’s second largest processor of chicken, beef and pork.

Tom Hayes, president and CEO of Tyson, says his company’s decision to invest in Memphis Meats was simply because today’s consumers want more protein. With 30 per cent of Earth’s land dedicated to the production of livestock, providing an alternativ­e that can bypass ethical and environmen­tal concerns requires innovative thinking.

“Lab-grown meat holds the promise of requiring less land, wasting less water, limiting the spread of livestock disease and eliminatin­g the need to slaughter animals,” says Hayes.

New Zealand and Australian companies like Bean Supreme and The Alternativ­e Meat Co, who use plant-based soy proteins to mimic the flavour and texture of meat, are responding to consumer demand for vegan food.

Angel Food’s founder and CEO, Alice Shopland, says our eating habits are deeply ingrained and it’s not always easy to make sudden changes. She maintains that taking small steps to reduce meat intake and experiment­ing with the variety of new and exciting food options is a great start.

“People end up eating more adventurou­sly when they go vegan. Personally, I think food should be fun and interestin­g. Most of my vegan friends are actually quite obsessed with food, sharing new recipes and ideas.”

She’s noticed a big swing in the last two years with her dairy-free cheeses; previously only stocked in specialist organic stores, they are now considered mainstream, available in supermarke­ts nationwide.

“People were reluctant to taste our cheese because they thought dairy-free cheese was just too weird. But there’s a massive shift away from dairy and customers love our products.”

New Zealand is still far behind in terms of growing plant-based foods and while we continue to pump out animal products, there is no plant-based industry or economy in place. Most ingredient­s for plant products are still imported, with very little infrastruc­ture set up to deal with future production.

Like many in her industry, Shopland says convention­al livestock farming has been a disaster on the environmen­t. The excessive over-use of land, the polluted waterways and the impact that greenhouse gas emissions have had on the environmen­t, is enough to convince any caring human to call for an

alternativ­e to meat.

Delicious alternativ­es

Glenorchy’s Aro Hā Wellness Retreat offers vegan-only fare to its clients. Head chef Jenny Lomas says the majority of guests are not vegan or even vegetarian, but the response is always overwhelmi­ngly enthusiast­ic.

“Whenever I plan a menu, the first considerat­ion is what we can harvest from the Aro Hā garden. People couldn’t imagine vegan food could be so delicious, varied and satiating.” Menus are created around the retreat’s large seasonal garden. Lomas encourages guests to ditch processed foods as much as possible and opt for more fresh fruit and vegetables to improve gut health, support the immune system and enhance vitality.

“I completed my BSc in Nutritiona­l Medicine and became a vegetarian a few years later. The negative effects of farming on the environmen­t, animal suffering, and the obvious health benefits associated with giving up meat, were enough to convince me.”

Lomas says the food scene is rapidly changing with supermarke­ts and cafés in Queenstown offering a greater selection of vegan options.

Auckland’s newest vegan eatery, The Butcher’s Son, has quickly establishe­d itself with an innovative menu. The beetroot, tempeh, mushroom and dairy-free cheddar burgers make the traditiona­l hamburger seem dull.

Owners James and Louise Logan were inspired to set up the restaurant after living in Bali for several years. “The vegan food there is phenomenal. We were totally motivated to bring more variety to the New Zealand market and convince people that eating plant-based food doesn’t equate to boring.”

She says there are a few key foods, such as legumes, tofu, tempeh, quinoa and pea protein, that can be incorporat­ed into a whole foods diet to ensure all nutritiona­l needs are met.

“People sometimes ask, ‘what can I eat as a vegan?’. I tell them I eat everything I always did, just vegan versions of it.”

She says the adverse effects that commercial livestock farming has had on the environmen­t is one of the many compelling reasons to cut back or give up eating meat.

“There’s just no denying that a plant-based diet is the most environmen­tally friendly way to eat.”

Without doubt, we are seeing a global shift towards a more holistic approach to food. Consumers want more transparen­cy when it comes to food sources and are scrutinisi­ng ingredient­s more closely.

What the people want

Growth in demand for plant-based food is increasing at a rapid rate, according to Noel Josephson, company director at Ceres Organics. He says the company is only just keeping up with requests for their latest product release of jackfruit, vegan mayonnaise and aioli.

“There is an overall shift in the way people are thinking; health trends, in particular longevity, but also interest in allergen-free and organic food. It’s about being more environmen­tally responsibl­e. Every meal matters and helps shape the landscape we live in.”

Agricultur­e is responsibl­e for almost half of New Zealand’s carbon emissions, amounting to 80,000 mega tonnes annually.

New Zealand’s heavy reliance on nitrogen-based chemical fertiliser­s for intensive farming has contribute­d to the decline in our waterways. Irrigation rigs take millions of litres of river water to saturate high country farms, accounting for about half of all fresh water use (around four times as much as personal use in homes). Around 1000 litres of water is needed to produce a single litre of cow’s milk, along with the associated run-off and environmen­tal waste.

The United States Department of Agricultur­e says intensive farming is accountabl­e for 80 to 90 per cent of US water consumptio­n.

“We’re seeing the impacts of climate change locally, with droughts and flooding, and realising we’ve reached a tipping point in our environmen­tal limits,” says Josephson.

New Zealanders have become more discerning, eager to see the people behind their brands to ensure their ethics and values are aligned with their own.

Coyo Organic brand manager Jonathan Knight maintains that we still lag well behind Europe when it comes to technologi­cal developmen­t and food trends. Coyo’s story dates back to Fiji in the 1950s, where the founder, Henry Gosling, spent his childhood collecting coconuts from plantation­s and converting them to milk and food for family meals. The family combined their love of coconut and passion for health, to create a coconut milk yoghurt.

“Almost every single part of the coconut can be turned into a saleable product, so from a sustainabi­lity angle it’s one of the top crops,” says Knight.

He says reducing our meat intake and switching to a plant-based diet is undeniably the best way forward. The majority of land use in New Zealand is used for primary production (agricultur­e and forestry). Convention­al farming is responsibl­e for 50 per cent of our greenhouse gas emissions, heavily polluted waterways and depleting the land of native bush. According to Urban Agricultur­e researcher Tobias Heeringa, our main economic drivers of dairy and meat will become less relevant in the future. He says urban agricultur­e, vertical farming practices and lab-grown food are creating a bigger groundswel­l globally and there’s a great opportunit­y for New Zealand to get on board.

“I hope we are smart enough to see the value in embracing more of a plant-based diet, which will create innovative industry and produce exportable plant foods, such as meat analogues and high-health crops.” Currently, the United States takes 50 per cent of New Zealand’s beef exports and most of it goes into burger manufactur­ing. Agricultur­e farming also takes up a third of New Zealand’s total land mass.

“The mindset has to change. We need to find ways to treat the land with respect – it’s essential for the long-term health and biodiversi­ty of New Zealand’s ecology,” says Heeringa.

Making changes

A recent Beef and Lamb NZ report concedes that various forces, including health and environmen­tal concerns relating to climate change, are driving government­s, consumers and investors to look for alternativ­es to red meat.

The future of farming may more likely be in naturally raised, grass-fed, hormone and antibiotic-free beef, which commands a higher export premium.

Although much of New Zealand’s heritage and economy is tied to dairy and beef farming and the traditiona­l mindset has been strongly ingrained in favour of meat, agricultur­e and future of food specialist Rosie Bosworth says we are in the process of a revolution­ary change.

“The younger generation, essentiall­y the cornerston­e of our future, are more open to embracing alternativ­e foods. Whether it’s

paleo, dairy-free or a plant-based diet, the millennial­s are way more curious than the elderly population.”

As access to more palatable and price-competitiv­e plant-based products increases, Bosworth says the switch to protein alternativ­es will be easier.

She thinks lab-grown meat is an innovative industry to watch. Lab meat products are not farm-raised or from live animals and farmers in the US have challenged whether the products can legitimate­ly be called ‘meat’. The U.S. Cattleman’s Associatio­n have filed a petition with the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, wanting an official definition for the terms beef and meat. It’s very clear that livestock farmers feel sufficient­ly threatened by the lab meat industry.

Better for the planet

The UN has openly acknowledg­ed that quite apart from being the leading cause of resource consumptio­n in the environmen­tal degradatio­n of our planet, livestock farming plays a major role in global warming. The statistics are sobering.

Around 60 billion farmed animals are killed every year globally; 40 million of which are farmed in New Zealand. Agribusine­ss (cattle grazing and soy production) is the leading cause of Amazon rainforest destructio­n and species extinction. It also contribute­s to ocean dead zones, deforestat­ion, soil acidificat­ion, spread of disease and compromise­d human health.

Dr Michael Klaper, a physician at California’s TrueNorth Health Centre, says all the nutrients that humans actually require are available in the plant kingdom. “The purpose of cow’s milk is to feed baby calves. I tell my patients not to eat baby calf growth food, unless you have a tail and four legs.”

Howard Lyman, former cattle rancher and author of Mad Cowboy, says there’s no way the planet can continue to support people eating meat every day. “We could feed every human being on the planet if we took all the feed and grain that goes into feeding animals and turned it into food for humans.”

New Zealand is one of the highest consumers of fertiliser per land mass. As part of the net zero emissions bill, the government has promised to increase tree planting and support agricultur­al innovation.

Canadian filmmaker James Cameron recently urged

New Zealanders to eat less meat and consume less dairy in order to reach our climate goals.

“Reconsider­ing how we eat offers us hope, empowering us with choice over what our future planet will look like.”

Given that dairy and meat are New Zealand’s first and second largest exports with a combined worth in 2017 of more than 17 billion dollars, it will take some serious motivation to make the desperatel­y needed changes.

Landcorp chief executive Steve Carden says New Zealand farming has reached its economic, social and environmen­tal limit and agricultur­e needs a new strategy that’s more sustainabl­e and environmen­tally friendly.

“The way people consume food is changing and plant-based alternativ­es to meat and dairy are a new entrant which needs to be taken seriously,” says Carden.

American author and foodie Michael Pollan sums it up seamlessly, “Eat real foods, not too much, and mostly plants.”

 ??  ?? With much of our economy tied to dairy and beef farming, experts say New Zealand has a long way to go to achieve a more plant-based approach.
With much of our economy tied to dairy and beef farming, experts say New Zealand has a long way to go to achieve a more plant-based approach.
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