San Diego Union-Tribune

NESTLE INVESTS IN STARTUP THAT MAKES FAKE CHICKEN THAT HAS SKIN AND BONES

Vegan chicken wings have bones fashioned out of bamboo stalks

- BY CORINNE GRETLER Gretler writes for Bloomberg News.

Nestle invested in a vegan startup that is trying to mimic chicken in the most realistic way possible, including fake skin and bones, as the world’s largest food company presses ahead with expansion in plant-based meat substitute­s.

Nestle led a funding round of about $4 million in Sundial Foods, said Jessica Schwabach, chief executive officer of the Albany, Calif.based company. The proceeds will help fund initial production as the company plans to introduce vegan chicken wings in the Bay Area in the spring and expand throughout California next year.

The Swiss food giant has been investing heavily in alternativ­e proteins as an increasing number of consumers forgo animal products amid environmen­tal and health concerns. After a late start to the vegan market, Chief Executive Officer Mark Schneider now aims to have a plant-based substitute for every animal protein. Nestle is testing the waters for new technologi­es, including cultured meat with Israeli cell-based startup Future Meat Technologi­es Ltd.

Sundial was created in 2019 after co-founders Schwabach, who is vegan, and Siwen Deng met at the University of California Berkeley’s Alternativ­e Meats Program where they explored issues like how to tackle dryness in plant-based meat alternativ­es. They spent a year at Nestle’s R&D Accelerato­r site in 2020 and did a test run together in Swiss grocery stores late last year.

“People liked the realistic appearance and the high protein content — but their favorite aspect was the plant-based skin,” CEO Schwabach, 22, said in an interview recently. “It added to the cooking experience and provided interestin­g texture while eating.”

A spokespers­on for Nestle declined to comment.

Sundial’s products, which are chick-pea based, use eight ingredient­s. Its chicken wing substitute­s count 27 grams of protein per 100 grams, roughly the same as the original product. The skin is made out of a protein-lipid film that also helps lock in moisture, and the bones are fashioned out of bamboo stalks.

“We want plant-based products to replace the butcher, in the sense that it serves the same purposes without consumers feeling like they’re forcing themselves to eat vegan or vegetarian,” Schwabach said.

The alternativ­e-protein market has shown some signs of a slowdown. Beyond Meat Inc. shares dropped 13 percent on Nov. 11 after the maker of faux burger patties forecast sales below analysts’ forecasts.

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