Foto: Steakholder Foods
Company prints fish fillet with 3D printer
Hope to start selling them in 2024
The Israeli company Steakholder Foods, together with Singaporean company Umami Meats, has used bioprinting technology to create the world's first 3D-printed fish fillet.Steakholder Foods used cells from grouper that were grown by the company to print fillets that can be used in dishes after being printed in the company's 3D printer."We are delighted to have produced the world's first whole fillet cultivated fish in partnership with Steakholder Foods. In this first tasting, we showcased a cultivated product that flakes, tastes, and melts in your mouth exactly like excellent fish should. In the coming months, we intend to announce our plans for bringing this world-class cultivated fish to the market," said Umami Meats CEO Mihir Pershad in a press release.Steakholder Foods hopes to start selling its 3D-printed fish fillets sometime in 2024. There is currently no information on how much they will cost compared to naturally produced grouper fillets. Steakholder Foods has also developed technology to produce food based on eels, so it is not entirely impossible that we will also be able to eat 3D-printed eel in the future.Below is a video clip showing what it looks like when Steakholder Foods prints a fish fillet.
steakholderfoods.com
Cars,
Steakholder Foods,
Umami Meats,
bioprinting technology,
sea bass,
cultivated fish
Via
singularityhub.com
37.0°
0Wille Wilhelmsson
fre. 5 maj 2023, 10:30
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