Research Topic: mycoprotein

The Color-Developing Methods for Cultivated Meat and Meat Analogues: A Mini-Review

This review examines how scientists are improving the color of lab-grown and plant-based meat to make them look more like traditional meat. Both natural ingredients like beet juice and paprika, as well as specialized cooking techniques, can help achieve the desired red meat color. The research shows that combining multiple coloring methods works better than using a single ingredient, and natural colorants are becoming preferred over synthetic dyes due to health concerns.

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Edible mycelium as proliferation and differentiation support for anchorage-dependent animal cells in cultivated meat production

Scientists developed a new technology using edible mushroom mycelium (the root-like structure of fungi) as a scaffold to grow animal muscle cells for cultivated meat production. They tested different fungal species and found that mycelium from koji mold (Aspergillus oryzae) worked best for supporting cell growth and maturation. Unlike current plastic microcarriers that must be removed from the final product, these edible carriers can be incorporated directly into the meat, adding nutritional value and reducing waste.

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Conversion of Soluble Compounds in Distillery Wastewater into Fungal Biomass and Metabolites Using Australian Ganoderma Isolates

Researchers discovered that Ganoderma mushroom mycelium can clean up rum distillery wastewater while producing edible, protein-rich fungal biomass. The mycelium successfully removed harmful compounds from the wastewater and accumulated bioactive compounds with health benefits. This dual-benefit approach transforms an environmental waste problem into a valuable food ingredient, offering a sustainable and economical solution for the distillery industry.

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