Today's Editorial

Today's Editorial - 30 October 2022

 ‘Meat’ from plants, and meat vegetarian

Source: By Harish Damodaran: The Indian Express

Recently, meat and seafood retailer Licious forayed into the marketing of “mock” chicken and mutton under a new ‘UnCrave’ brand. Also, cricketer M S Dhoni picked up an undisclosed equity stake in plant-based meat startup Shaka Harry, and the California-based Beyond Meat — the global pioneer in the segment — partnered with India’s biggest buffalo meat exporter Allana Group to sell its products in the country.

Actor couple Riteish and Genelia Deshmukh had founded plant-based Imagine Meats in September 2021. And in February this year, another alternative protein startup, Blue Tribe, roped in former Indian cricket captain Virat Kohli and his wife Anushka Sharma as investors and brand ambassadors.

What is plant-based meat, which is attracting celebrity endorsement? (Beyond Meat has Kim Kardashian as its “chief taste consultant”.)

“Plant-based” refers to products that bio-mimic or replicate meatseafoodeggs, and milk derived from animals — by looking, smelling, and tasting like them.

Shaka Harry sells “just like” mutton samosas — and also chicken nuggets, momos, and fries with the same prefix. Beyond Meat’s patties, apart from using coconut oil to copy the melty beef fat of a real hamburger, apparently even bleed as they cook — the “blood” coming from a beetroot juice-based liquid.

Plant-based dairy products include ice-cream that isn’t simply a frozen dessert that replaces milk fat with vegetable oil. Even the proteins and other solids-not-fat ingredients are sourced from plants.

How are these made?

Animal meat contains protein, fat, vitamins, minerals, and water, just like plants. This biochemical similarity allows for finding analogues in the plant kingdom or making them through mechanical, chemical, or biological treatment of such ingredients.

The challenge lies in replicating muscle tissue that plants don’t have. The unique spatial arrangement of proteins in these tissues is what creates the distinct texture of animal meat. That’s why plant-based mutton samosas, kebabs or keema, having a simpler texture, are easier to make than larger whole cuts of animal meat such as chicken breasts and pork chops.

As for plant-based dairy, the main products are milk from oats, almond, soyabean, coconut, and rice. Among these, oat milk is considered the closest to regular milk in taste and texture. It is also thicker and creamier, as oats absorb more water than nuts or rice during soaking, and more of the grain gets strained for incorporation into the final product. Oat milk players include the Swedish company Oatly and the Bengaluru-headquartered Alt Co.

How big is the industry?

According to the Good Foods Institute at Washington DC, retail sales of plant-based animal product alternatives in the US stood at $7.4 billion in 2021. The major categories were plant-based milk ($2.6 billion)meat ($1.4 billion), creamer ($516 million), ice-cream ($458 million), yogurt ($377 million), cheese ($291 million), butter ($214 million), ready-to-drink beverages ($202 million), meals ($513 million) and protein liquids, powders, and bars ($463 million).

While the industry has grown from $4.8 billion in 2018, it hasn’t lived up to the initial hype. Beyond Meat’s initial public offer of shares in early-May 2019 was at $25. Within three months, that price almost hit $240, valuing the company at over $13.4 billion. Today, the shares are trading at just above $13. Oatly shares, too, have fallen to $2.25 from the May 2021 IPO price of $17 and a high of $29 about a month later.

Sales of plant-based meat — which also has other big names like Impossible Foods and the Kellogg Company-owned MorningStar Farms — were flat in 2021, with even milk growing at only 4%.

What about plant-based meats?

Sandeep Devgan, co-founder of Shaka Harry, is clear that India’s significant vegetarian population isn’t his target market: “We aren’t going after them to eat our products, since they are plant-based.” The company’s focus, instead, is “the meat eaters, both hardcore and not-so-regular”.

Shaka Harry is not placing its products in the vegetarian section in supermarkets. “We are telling the hardcore meat person to replace what he’s eating now with something that has the same taste, aroma, looks, and mouth-feel, maybe once or twice a week. And we are telling the occasional meat eater that you can have our just-like mutton keema or chicken-stuffed paratha at any time,” Devgan says.

Balram Singh Yadav, managing director of the food and animal feed major Godrej Agrovet Ltd, does not see much potential for plant-based meats in India. “In the West, these are viewed mainly as replacements for red meats (beef, pork, and mutton) on account of health concerns. India’s annual per capita consumption of fish and chicken is at 6 kg and 4.5 kg respectively, as against only 700-800 gm for mutton,” he points out.

Agrees Mark Kahn: “Companies here are basically emulating the West with a near copy-paste model. Plant-based meat can have only a niche market relevant for the top 1%.”