Clean meat : how growing meat without animals will revolutionize dinner and the world
(2018)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
664.9/SHAPIRO,P

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Adult Nonfiction 664.9/SHAPIRO,P Available

Details

PUBLISHED
New York : Gallery Books, 2018
©2018
EDITION
First Gallery Books hardcover edition
DESCRIPTION

xii, 241 pages ; 24 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9781501189081, 1501189085 :, 1501189085, 9781501189081
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The second domestication -- Science to the rescue -- (Google) Searching for a solution -- Leading with leather -- Clean meat coming to America -- Project Jake -- Brewing food (and controversy) -- Tasting the future

The next great scientific revolution is underway - Discovering new ways to create enough food for the world's ever-growing hungry population. Paul Shapiro gives you a front-row seat for the wild story of the race to create and commercialize cleaner, safer, sustainable meat - real meat - without the animals. From the entrepreneurial visionaries to the scientists' workshops to the big business boardrooms - Shapiro details that quest for clean meat and other animal products and examines the debate raging around it. Sin the dawn of Homo sapiens some quarter million years ago, animals have satiated our species' desire for meat. But with a growing global population and demand for meat, eggs, dairy, leather, and more, raising such massive numbers of farm animals is woefully inefficient and takes an enormous toll on the planet, public health, and certainly the animals themselves. But what if we could have our meat and eat it, too? Enter clean meat - real, actual meat grown (or brewed!) from animal cells - as well as other clean food that ditch animal cells altogether and are simply built from the molecule up. Whereas our ancestors domesticated wild animals into livestock, today we're beginning to domesticate their cells, leaving the animals out of the equation. From one single cell of a cow, you could feed an entire village. The the story of this coming "second domestication" is anything but tame.--Inside jacket flap