The Boston Globe

US OK’s chicken created from cultivated cells

2 firms to offer nation’s first ‘lab-grown’ meat

- By Jonel Aleccia and Laura Ungar

For the first time, US regulators on Wednesday approved the sale of chicken made from animal cells, allowing two California companies to offer “labgrown” meat to the nation’s restaurant tables and eventually, supermarke­t shelves.

The Agricultur­e Department gave the green light to Upside Foods and Good Meat, firms that had been racing to be the first in the US to sell meat that doesn’t come from slaughtere­d animals — what’s now being referred to as “cell-cultivated” or “cultured” meat as it emerges from the laboratory and arrives on dinner plates.

The move launches a new era of meat production aimed at eliminatin­g harm to animals and drasticall­y reducing the environmen­tal impacts of grazing, growing feed for animals, and animal waste.

“Instead of all of that land and all of that water that’s used to feed all of these animals that are slaughtere­d, we can do it in a different way,” said Josh Tetrick, cofounder and chief executive of Eat Just, which operates Good Meat.

The companies received approvals for federal inspection­s required to sell meat and poultry in the United States. The action came months after the US Food and Drug Administra­tion deemed that products from both companies are safe to eat. A manufactur­ing company called Joinn Biologics, which works with Good Meat, was also cleared to make the products.

Cultivated meat is grown in steel tanks, using cells that come from a living animal, a fertilized egg, or a special bank of stored cells. In Upside’s case, it comes out in large sheets that are then formed into shapes like chicken cutlets and sausages. Good Meat, which already sells cultivated meat in Singapore, the first country to allow it, turns masses of chicken cells into cutlets, nuggets, shredded meat, and satays.

But don’t look for this novel meat in US grocery stores anytime soon. Cultivated chicken is much more expensive than meat from whole, farmed birds and cannot yet be produced on the scale of traditiona­l meat, said Ricardo San Martin, director of the Alt:Meat Lab at University of California Berkeley.

The companies plan to serve the new food first in exclusive restaurant­s: Upside has partnered with a San Francisco restaurant called Bar Crenn, while Good Meat dishes will be served at a Washington, D.C., restaurant run by chef and owner Jose Andrés.

Company officials are quick to note the products are meat, not substitute­s like the Impossible Burger or offerings from Beyond Meat, which are made from plant proteins and other ingredient­s.

Globally, more than 150 companies are focusing on meat from cells, not only chicken but pork, lamb, fish, and beef, which scientists say has the biggest impact on the environmen­t.

Upside, based in Berkeley, operates a 70,000-square-foot building in nearby Emeryville. On a recent Tuesday, visitors entered a gleaming commercial kitchen where chef Jess Weaver was sauteeing a cultivated chicken filet in a white wine butter sauce with tomatoes, capers, and green onions.

The finished chicken breast product was slightly paler than the grocery store version. Otherwise it looked, cooked, smelled, and tasted like any other panfried poultry.

“The most common response we get is, ‘Oh, it tastes like chicken,’” said Amy Chen, Upside’s chief operating officer.

Good Meat, based in Alameda, operates a 100,000-squarefoot plant, where chef Zach Tyndall dished up a smoked chicken salad on a sunny June afternoon. He followed it with a chicken “thigh” served on a bed of potato puree with a mushroom-vegetable demi-glace and tiny purple cauliflowe­r florets. The Good Meat chicken product will come pre-cooked, requiring only heating to use in a range of dishes.

Chen acknowledg­ed that many consumers are skeptical, even squeamish, about the thought of eating chicken grown from cells. “We call it the ‘ick factor,’” she said.

The sentiment was echoed in a recent poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Half of US adults said that they are unlikely to try meat grown using cells from animals. About half said they don’t think it would be safe.

But once people understand how the meat is made, they’re more accepting, Chen said. And once they taste it, they’re usually sold. “It is the meat that you’ve always known and loved,” she said.

Cultivated meat begins with cells. Upside experts take cells from live animals, choosing those most likely to taste good and to reproduce quickly and consistent­ly, forming high-quality meat, Chen said. Good Meat products are created from a master cell bank formed from a commercial­ly available chicken cell line.

Once the cell lines are selected, they’re combined with a broth-like mixture that includes the amino acids, fatty acids, sugars, salts, vitamins, and other elements cells need to grow. Inside the tanks, called cultivator­s, the cells grow, proliferat­ing quickly. At Upside, muscle and connective tissue cells grow together, forming large sheets. After about three weeks, the sheets of poultry cells are removed from the tanks and formed into cutlets, sausages or other foods. Good Meat cells grow into large masses, which are shaped into a range of meat products.

Both firms emphasized that initial production will be limited. The Emeryville facility can produce up to 50,000 pounds of cultivated meat products a year, though the goal is to expand to 400,000 pounds per year, Upside officials said. Good Meat officials wouldn’t estimate a production goal.

By comparison, the United States produces about 50 billion pounds of chicken per year.

 ?? JEFF CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chef Zach Tyndall prepared Good Meat’s cultivated chicken at the Eat Just office in Alameda, Calif., on Wednesday.
JEFF CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS Chef Zach Tyndall prepared Good Meat’s cultivated chicken at the Eat Just office in Alameda, Calif., on Wednesday.

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