
A Synthetic Route to Natural - Don't Be a Lab Rat!
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I am very concerned as to the consequences of this technology being the main driver in food, pharmaceuticals personal care products and cosmetics.Synthetic Vegan Ingredients Now back to where I started this whole conversation - vegan collagen. You’ve probably guessed already that a genetically modified micro-organism is possibly behind this new trendy ingredient. I’ve given you further reading on this in the references. Vegan rennet. Making synthetic vegan ingredients is a growing trend with start-up biotech companies going gang busters. The plant-based movement is a driver and with it grows these frankenstein microbes to make it possible to eat non-animal sourced meat, dairy and collagen. Vegan additives are possible too, as microbes are being used rather than animals, but it must be noted that animals must be involved in some of this genetic manipulation. Rennet (an enzyme also known as chymosin) is a prime example. Originally it came from the stomach of an animal, but now genetically modified microbes make the rennet to curdle milk to make cheese. To make microbial rennet, chymosin chromosomes are extracted from an animal's stomach cells then implanted into yeast cells. These are then fermented on a substrate to make the rennet, which is then isolated out. Making Plant-Based Meats Bleed and Taste Like Meat I write in my new book Lab To Table: Stop being a lab rat and start making better choices for your table. This particularly applies to the new flavour compound found in vegan and plant-based meats called soy leghemoglobin, which also makes the product 'bleed', just like an animal product. After reading this blog, you would probably have already figured out that, yes, this is a genetically modified micro-organism (implanted with the gene of the soy plant). The gene produces a heme molecule that is found on a nodule on the root of the soy plant. This has an iron-containing molecule that gives the effect of bleeding and is implanted into a microbe to produce soy leghemoglobin. It’s up to you to decide whether you want to be a lab rat or make better choices for your table by eating real foods, purchased at your local farmers market, grown by regenerative agricultural methods, and then getting back into the kitchen to feed and nourish your family to heal this nation. To make sure you are not part of this experiment, read all of your ingredients and try not to buy packaged multi-ingredient, ultra-processed foods of any sort. Check out your medications (ask your pharmacist for more information) and go back to natural skin care products like Twenty8. This will go a long way in making sure you have the least exposure to these new synthetic biological products. It’s also important not to be cajoled by marketing speak in this arena: even foods that say they are natural, gluten free, paleo, vegan, plant based and keto can have these biotechnological-derived additives. Read your ingredients and stay away from extracts (that includes rosemary extract and spice extracts), acidity regulators like citric acid and ascorbic acid, colours, all flavours (natural and artificial), as well as starches, most food additives with numbers and anything that doesn’t look like it came out of the ground or from the ground. A Great Rule of Thumb And as a good rule of thumb, make sure your food is as close to its original source as possible. We can stay healthy by eating these foods as these are the foods we have lived on for thousands of generations. Cyndi Further Reading and References https://patents.google.com/patent/US7507571B2/en https://apnews.com/PR%20Newswire/ff548c99a03afb0d69bb7871f7cd4fc0 https://agfundernews.com/bio-designed-and-animal-free-collagen-on-the-horizon-as-geltor-and-gelita-deepen-ties.html https://synbiobeta.com/gore-tex-is-betting-big-on-synthetic-biology/ https://synbiobeta.com/category/agriculture/ https://synbiobeta.com/manus-bio-facility-to-produce-next-generation-natural-ingredients/ https://www.cargill.com/food-beverage/na/truvia-about-stevia https://www.cargill.com/2018/cargill-officially-starts-producing-eversweet