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A new butter product that never needed any sunshine to be created looks, smells, and tastes like butter, but without farmland, fertilizers, or emissions. Of the 51 billion tons of greenhouse gases emitted each year, 7% comes from fats and oils production, with their home lab base in San Jose, California, backed by Bill Gates, who wrote in his blog, 'the idea of switching to lab made fats and oils may seem strange at first, but their potential to significantly reduce our carbon footprint is immense. They are the only foods in the world so far that are made entirely without photosynthesis.' This is a war now on the sun. 'Folks, can we all come to the same conclusion together? I think the world is being taken over by vampires.' 'He's not an alien.' 'He's a vampire.' 'And he hates the sun. He hates humanity, and he hates life.'

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Real butter, unlike margarine or low-fat versions, is not toxic, artificial, or made with inflammatory seed oils. Real butter contains cream, fat, and a little salt. High fat does not make you fat; bodies need fat to function. Butter is rich in fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K, and contains CLA, omega-3, and MCTs, which are good for the heart. High-fat foods like butter, alongside an animal-based diet, will improve one's health and appearance.

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"It looks, smells, and tastes like the butter we're all familiar with, but without the farmland, fertilizers, or emissions tied to that typical process." "The company is called saver and you better believe it." "Their pioneering tech uses carbon and hydrogen to make the stick of butter you see on this plate." "They take carbon dioxide from the air and hydrogen from water, heat them up and oxidize them." "Sustainability is why we are here. It's all done releasing zero greenhouse gases using no farmland to feed cows." "That's not all of the 51,000,000,000 tons of greenhouse gases emitted every year. 7% is from the production of fats and oils from animals and plants." "We expect that to be on the shelves kind of more like around 2027." "No palm oil, a significant contributor to deforestation and climate change."

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So highly processed vegetable oils are healthy for us and butter is bad for us, right? Well, here's how they're both made. First, seeds are exposed to high heat and pressed to extract the oil. Heating increases the yield but can oxidize the oil, which makes it pro inflammatory. Then, it's treated with a toxic solvent called hexane to further increase the yield. Then it's distilled to remove the hexane. After that, it's degummed and neutralized. Then it's bleached to make its appearance acceptable to consumers. And then they deodorize it because the oils can develop off flavors and odors due to the presence of free fatty acids, oxidation products, and other volatile compounds. Sounds like a pretty normal, safe, and natural thing for humans to consume. Now here's how butter's made. Rinse it with water, and then you're done. Now this is clearly unhealthy, dangerous, and toxic to humans.

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Someone asked where to get the best butter in the United States. Amos Miller. This is raw, unpasteurized, cultured butter. So it's not been zapped, microwaved, stripped of all of its nutrients, and look at how yellow it All those beautiful fat soluble minerals are very good for the body. Your brain is primarily fat. You also need fat to pull out toxins. So Amos Miller, best you can get. And the cool part is they ship directly to your house, so you can get all organic food directly to your house and avoid the toxic stuff in the grocery store.

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Proper butter, unlike margarine or low-fat versions, is not toxic, artificial, or made with inflammatory seed oils. Real butter contains cream, fat, and salt. High fat does not make you fat; bodies need fat to function. Butter is rich in fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K, and contains CLA, omega-3, and MCTs, which are good for the heart. High-fat foods like butter, alongside an animal-based diet, will improve your well-being.

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Butter is incredibly healthy and contains immunologically active components and fat-soluble vitamins like vitamin K2. The idea that saturated fat is bad is outdated, as evidence shows no connection between it and increased cardiovascular disease. Fats in grass-fed butter help with satiety, and studies show dairy fat is associated with leanness in both adults and kids, as well as better outcomes in many clinical endpoints. Dairy fat contains odd-chain fatty acids, like pentadecanoic acid and heptadecanoic acid, which are consistently associated with good health outcomes in humans. Therefore, butter is a health food.

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Agricultural emissions are a challenge, but Savor has developed a non-agricultural method for making food without greenhouse gases. Their fats are produced through a thermochemical process, unique in the world. Savor's technology aims to create sustainable and craveable food, like butter with a complex fatty acid composition. The goal is to make environmentally friendly food that tastes delicious, with plans to release butter soon and use Savor as a key ingredient in other products.

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This video criticizes vegan buttery spreads as an unhealthy alternative to real butter. The speaker highlights the nutritional benefits of butter, such as fatty acids that promote optimal health, mitochondrial health, weight loss, and satiety. They express disbelief at the use of seed oils and fava bean protein in vegan spreads, stating that they are not good for humans. The speaker suggests that vegans may miss the taste and nutrition of butter, but encourages them to opt for real butter instead.

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"It looks, smells, and tastes like the butter we're all familiar with, but without the farmland, fertilizers, or emissions tied to that typical process." "And this butter breakthrough, it's happening right here in Batavia." "The company is called saver and you better believe it." "Their pioneering tech uses carbon and hydrogen to make the stick of butter you see on this plate." "No palm oil, a significant contributor to deforestation and climate change." "They take carbon dioxide from the air and hydrogen from water, heat them up and oxidize them." "Sustainability is why we are here. It's all done releasing zero greenhouse gases using no farmland to feed cows." "We expect that to be on the shelves kind of more like around 2027." "Right now they're working directly with restaurants, bakeries and food suppliers, releasing these chocolates made with their butter in time for the holidays."

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Speaker 1 discusses Kerrygold and grass-fed butter, saying Kerrygold is facing heat after admitting their grass-fed cows are fed genetically modified corn and soy for weeks at a time. Speaker 2 adds that one Kerrygold block carries months of industrial residue, and asserts that the grass-fed label is not 100% accurate. The claim continues that for months, these cows are also fed lab-engineered rations, driving inflammatory omega-6s straight into the spread. Speaker 0 notes that when people look at healthy foods like grass-fed butter, they pay more believing it’s better, less inflammatory, with fewer omega-6s. The belief is challenged by the claim that one of the largest suppliers of grass-fed butter is not feeding their cows grass but GMO corn and GMO soy. The discussion labels this as consumer fraud at the highest levels and expresses a wish that the government would take action. Speaker 2 specifies that in 2023 Kerrygold was pulled from shelves for leaching PFA chemicals from the packaging, adding another layer to the controversy. Overall, the speakers allege that Kerrygold’s grass-fed butter involves cows fed GMO corn and soy for extended periods, with cows receiving lab-engineered rations that increase omega-6 inflammatory content, and that the product was retracted in 2023 due to PFA chemicals in the packaging. They frame the situation as consumer fraud tied to premium pricing for grass-fed butter, and call for governmental intervention.

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Agricultural emissions are challenging to reduce, but Savor has developed a non-agricultural method to produce food without greenhouse gases. They create fats through a unique thermochemical process, making them the only foods made without photosynthesis. Savor's goal is to make sustainable food appealing for mass adoption, starting with butter and expanding to other products. The focus is on creating juicy, flavorful dishes like burgers and ice cream using Savor's innovative ingredients. The hope is to offer environmentally friendly food that tastes delicious.

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Speaker 0: The University of Nebraska just completed a study stating the way to save the world on carbon is to raise more cows. Cows are carbon negative; they produce more oxygen than they emit as methane and carbon. The takeaway is to eat more cheeseburgers or steaks to save the world.

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"They just slipped fake fish onto your plate, and Jeff Bezos is backing it." "This lab grown salmon approved by the FDA as safe is grown entirely from fish cells in stainless steel tanks, fed a nutrient formula, and molded into fillets that look just like the real thing." "Supporters claim it's sustainable and cruelty free, but the money trail shows billionaires like Bezos are pouring millions into replacing wild caught and farm raised fish with fully synthetic alternatives, shifting control of the food supply from fishermen and farmers to biotech labs." "The USDA's approval means these products can now quietly enter US restaurants without special labeling, meaning you could already be eating it without knowing." "The question isn't if it replaces your dinner, it's how fast."

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It looks, smells, and tastes like the butter we're all familiar with, but without the farmland fertilizers or emissions tied to that typical process. The company is called Savor and you better believe it. Their pioneering tech uses carbon and hydrogen to make the stick of butter you see on this plate. This is pretty novel to be able to make food that looks and tastes and feels exactly like dairy butter, but with no agriculture whatsoever and no long ingredient list. It's all done releasing zero greenhouse gases using no farmland to feed cows. The land footprint is like a thousand times lower than what you need in traditional agriculture. We expect that to be on the shelves kind of more like around 2027.

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This video features a conversation about a new insect-based protein made from mealworm larvae. The speaker explains that the protein is derived from mealworms and has been approved for human consumption by the EU. It is tasteless and can be used as a protein supplement in smoothies or other recipes. The production of this protein is also environmentally friendly, reducing emissions. Making the switch to this protein is seen as a significant intervention.

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Sabre has developed a new method to create food without using agriculture, reducing environmental impact. They produce fats through a thermochemical process, unique for being photosynthesis-free. The goal is to make sustainable food appealing for mass adoption. They showcase butter, burger, fries, and ice cream made with Sabre fat, aiming for craveable, juicy, and delicious alternatives to traditional options. Sabre plans to release butter soon and hopes their technology will help create environmentally friendly and tasty food products. Translation: Sabre has created a new way to make food without agriculture, reducing environmental impact. They produce fats through a thermochemical process, unique for not using photosynthesis. The goal is to make sustainable food appealing for mass adoption. They showcase butter, burger, fries, and ice cream made with Sabre fat, aiming for craveable, juicy, and delicious alternatives to traditional options. Sabre plans to release butter soon and hopes their technology will help create environmentally friendly and tasty food products.

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Bill Gates has invested in a startup called Savor, which is developing lab-made butter from carbon dioxide and hydrogen, aiming for regulatory approval. They claim it tastes like real butter and plan to create other dairy products and tropical oils using similar methods. While lab-grown dairy has been produced before, Savor's approach starts from basic elements. Another company, Cubic Foods, is working on lab-grown animal fat from stem cells, but Savor's project is distinct. Savor aims to make their butter affordable by 2025, with a significant investment of $33 million. However, health concerns remain unanswered, raising skepticism about this innovation.

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Cows and other grass-eating species emit methane, a potent greenhouse gas, contributing to about 6% of global emissions. To address this, efforts have been made to create artificial meat, with companies like Impossible and Beyond Meat leading the way. These products, such as the Impossible Burger available at Burger King, offer a slightly healthier option with lower cholesterol. Additionally, they significantly reduce methane emissions, animal cruelty, and the environmental impact of meat consumption on land use.

TED

A forgotten Space Age technology could change how we grow food | Lisa Dyson
Guests: Lisa Dyson
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NASA developed a method using hydrogenotrophs to create a closed-loop carbon cycle for food production in space, capturing astronauts' exhaled carbon dioxide to grow nutritious crops. Inspired by this, Lisa Dyson and her team are cultivating these microbes on Earth to recycle carbon into valuable products like amino acids and oils. This approach could revolutionize sustainable agriculture, allowing for high yields without deforestation, essential for feeding a projected 10 billion people by 2050.

TED

The next global agricultural revolution | Bruce Friedrich
Guests: Bruce Friedrich
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In 2019, 30 leading scientists warned that meat production is harming the planet and global health, necessitating a new agricultural revolution. Despite decades of advocacy, meat consumption remains at record highs, with North Americans averaging over 200 pounds per person. To address climate change and antibiotic resistance, we need to produce meat differently. Proposed solutions include growing plant-based meat and cultivating animal meat directly from cells, which could be more efficient and cheaper. Collaboration with the existing meat industry and government investment in these technologies is essential to create viable alternatives and tackle these global emergencies.

Possible Podcast

Spencer Hyman on flavor and chocolate
Guests: Spencer Hyman
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Flavor is so complicated that cracking it requires more than listing inputs; it becomes a personal map of taste. The discussion highlights how glucose monitors reveal individual responses to foods—coffee spikes, dark chocolate improves mood—illustrating that people experience flavor differently and can learn to savor through data-driven insight. The conversation also traces the history and culture of chocolate on Cocoa Runners’ site, describing how history shifts from royal events to people and connections, and how chocolate serves as a gateway to understanding five hundred years of global exchange. The host and guest discuss curating experiences, including the Reed Hoffman selection that guides travelers through diverse chocolates and ideas. Delving into the science, the speakers distinguish taste from flavor: taste is the basic detection of sweet, sour, salt, bitter, umami, and fat, while flavor arises from smell and the mouth’s volatile compounds. They discuss how AI can help describe flavor, citing Inflections Pi’s descriptors—sumptuous medley, a proper and scrumptious taste, a blossoming sensation, a verdant burst—and chocolate notes such as creamy, velvety aroma, earthiness, and fruitiness. They note the challenge of building flavor databases, since humans uniquely experience flavor, and propose analogies to music and color recognition to explain how flavor data could evolve. On sustainability, the conversation links fair pay for farmers, rainforest conservation, and water use: chocolate’s production consumes vast water because it grows in the rainforest, and poor pricing pressures can drive deforestation. The guests advocate craft chocolate as a path to better environmental and social outcomes, paying farmers fairly and creating shared, social eating experiences around chocolate. They discuss a future shaped by personalized nutrition, vertical farming, and better data-to-insight tools, arguing that technology should enrich savoring, not merely commodify food. The dialog closes with a humanist vision: flavor as social glue, dinner-table conversation, and a stepwise path to savor craft chocolate.

Moonshots With Peter Diamandis

Slaughter-Free Meat, Coming Soon To Your Dinner Table w/ Josh Tetrick | EP#58
Guests: Josh Tetrick
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Josh Tetrick, CEO of Good Meat, aims to produce meat without slaughtering animals, advocating for a smarter way to cultivate meat that reduces environmental harm. He emphasizes that a third of the planet is used to feed livestock, which contributes to climate change and zoonotic diseases. Tetrick reflects on the evolution of animal agriculture, highlighting the shift from traditional farming to industrialized methods that prioritize efficiency over animal welfare. The conversation explores the technology behind cultivated meat, which starts with cells obtained from a cell bank or animal biopsy. These cells are grown in bioreactors, creating muscle tissue that can be processed into various meat products. Tetrick notes that cultivated meat can be healthier, as it avoids antibiotics and reduces the risk of contamination. Good Meat has achieved regulatory approvals in Singapore and the U.S., marking significant milestones in the cultivated meat industry. Tetrick envisions a future where cultivated meat comprises a majority of global meat consumption by 2040, driven by advancements in production efficiency and partnerships with traditional meat companies. The discussion also highlights the importance of storytelling in entrepreneurship. Tetrick shares how personal narratives can resonate more deeply than statistics, emphasizing the need for authentic communication to connect with consumers. He concludes by reiterating the ethical imperative to reduce harm in food production, advocating for a shift towards cultivated meat as a sustainable solution for feeding the growing global population.

The Rich Roll Podcast

Can A Burger Help Save The Planet?
Guests: Pat Brown
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Pat Brown, founder of Impossible Foods, discusses the company's mission to replace animal agriculture by 2035 due to its significant environmental impact. He highlights that animal agriculture is the largest source of greenhouse gases, fresh water usage, and biodiversity loss, occupying about 50% of Earth's land. Brown emphasizes that simply educating people about the issues won't change dietary habits; instead, he believes in creating plant-based alternatives that meet consumer demands for taste and texture. Brown shares his background as a biochemist and his transition from academia to entrepreneurship, driven by a desire to tackle the urgent problems posed by animal agriculture. He notes that the key to success lies in developing technology that outperforms traditional meat in flavor, nutrition, and cost. The company focuses on understanding the biochemical basis of meat's appeal, particularly through the use of heme, a molecule that enhances flavor and aroma. He explains the importance of using trained tasters and consumer feedback to refine their products, ensuring they appeal to meat lovers. Brown also addresses the challenges of scaling production to meet rising demand, particularly after partnerships with major fast-food chains like Burger King. He acknowledges the need for agility in production and the importance of building a strong team to innovate rapidly. Brown discusses the broader implications of their mission, including improving global food security and reducing the environmental footprint of food production. He argues that transitioning away from animal agriculture could significantly mitigate climate change and restore biodiversity. He also touches on the misconceptions surrounding GMOs, asserting that their use in producing heme is safe and necessary for scalability. In conclusion, Brown envisions a future where plant-based alternatives dominate the food system, leading to a healthier planet and improved public health. He believes that as consumers experience the quality of these products, perceptions will shift, making plant-based options the norm rather than the exception.

a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast | Old Food, New Tech -- 'Clean Meat'
Guests: Uma Valeti, David Lee, Bruce Friedrich
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In this Asics Insi podcast, Uma Valeti (Memphis Meats), David Lee (Impossible Foods), and Bruce Friedrich (Good Food Institute) discuss the future of meat production amid growing global demand. Friedrich emphasizes the inefficiencies of traditional animal agriculture, noting that feeding 9.7 billion people by 2050 requires a shift away from animal products due to environmental and health concerns. He cites that raising animals contributes significantly to climate change, with chicken being particularly inefficient. Valeti explains Memphis Meats' approach of growing "clean meat" directly from animal cells, aiming to preserve cultural meat consumption while addressing sustainability. He highlights ongoing challenges in achieving the right texture and taste but notes progress in producing recognizable meat products. Lee describes Impossible Foods' strategy of creating plant-based products that appeal to meat lovers, focusing on taste and convenience. He emphasizes the importance of consumer experience and the role of social media in promoting new food options. The discussion concludes with optimism about technological advancements leading to more sustainable food systems, highlighting a potential future where clean meat and plant-based alternatives significantly reduce environmental impact and improve food security.
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