1. Selling outdated food
What’s the idea?
Launching in May 2014, Daily Table, a business founded by US entrepreneur Doug Rauch, will sell food that’s past its sell-by date,cosmetically blemished or food that is excess. All this food will be brought onsite, and the company will cook prepared meals with it. It’s going to be priced the same as junk food. Daily Table will also offer milk, eggs, bread and produce.
“Sell by” and “expiration” dates are just guidelines, say the experts
Problem solved
Most families know that they’re not giving their kids the nutrition they need, but many simply cannot afford to. Rauch aims to make healthy food available for the working poor at the same price as fast food by using expired food.
A recent report from the US Natural Resources Defence Council and Harvard Law School’s Food Law and Policy Clinic says Americans are prematurely throwing out food, largely because of confusion over what expiration dates actually mean. As much as 40% of food in the US – or the equivalent of $165 billion — is wasted, thrown away to fill landfills after spoiling in the refrigerator or pantry.
Innovation
By selling food that is perfectly edible, with recently expired dates, Daily Table will help to eliminate some of the greenhouse gas (GHG) methane, which is given off by the 1,2 to 2 billion tons of wasted food thrown away by consumers in develop countries.
Doug told NPR in a recent interview that the name of the store will be called The Daily Table. The store will mostly sell fruit and vegetables and freshly prepared products. Rauch describes his new store as a hybrid between a grocery store and a restaurant.
2. Lab-grown hamburgers
What’s the Idea?
Dr Mark Potter, who has been working on growing meat in a laboratory since 2008, served his first lab-grown hamburger in London last year. It was then cooked in butter and oil, and served to two lucky volunteers. The technology to grow fat cells is still lacking, making the meat rather high in protein.
Problem solved
Growing meat in a petrie dish may not end world hunger any time soon, but more than one trillion cells can be grown from one cell taken from a cow – enough for ten tons of meat. The burger “lived” in a dish for three months – a shorter period of time than it takes for a cow to grow to adulthood.
Some 40% of the world’s land surface is used for the purposes of keeping all 7 billion of us fed. In addition, the Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that livestock is responsible for about 18% of human-caused greenhouse gases.
Looks like a burger, smells like a burger, tastes (almost) like a burger
Innovation
Potter took muscle stem cells from a cow’s shoulder in a gentle biopsy and grew them in calf serum, with micro-exercise so they wouldn’t be flabby. A total of 20 000 cells were then assembled into a burger, bound with bread crumbs and egg, coloured with beet juice and saffron, and presented it to the public.
3. The New Protein: Eating Insects
What’s the idea?
Eating insects is good for you, apparently. They’re low in fat and are packed with protein. They’re also loaded with iron, thiamine and niacin, more commonly known as vitamins B1 and B3.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation released a report in 2013 which revealed that there are more than 1 900 edible insect species on Earth, hundreds of which are already part of the human diet in many countries. Around two billion people eat a wide variety of insects regularly, both cooked and raw. It’s only people in Western countries who gag at the idea.
Feeding insects to pets is not a new concept either. Population growth, climate change and agricultural and fishing needs are having a great impact on the global protein supply. The move to feed our pets the same as ourselves is adding greater demand for protein. A sustainable solution that is being considered is the use of insects as a protein source for pet food.
Could this be the future of food?
Problem Solved
As the population approaches 8 billion, feeding all those hungry people is becoming increasingly difficult. A growing number of experts claim that people will soon have no choice but to eat insects.
Entomophagy, the consumption of insects as food, is a safe and healthy way to help reduce pest insects without using insecticides. Besides their nutritional value, insects are also abundant and environmentally sustainable. Farming and harvesting insects takes very little water and transport fuel compared to livestock, grains and even vegetables. 50kg of feed produces less than 5kg of beef. The same amount of feed would produce more than four times that amount in crickets. 30% of the world land mass is presently used to graze or raise food for livestock. Insects require much less land. They also convert food into protein much more efficiently than livestock do, which means they need to eat far less, and they emit far fewer greenhouse gases than most livestock.
Plus, gathering and farming insects can offer new forms of employment and income, especially in developing tropical countries where a lot of edible insects live.
That helps to explain why 36 African countries are “entomophagous,” as are 23 in the Americas, 29 in Asia, and 11 in Europe. In the future, insects could help to provide a sustainable food source.
Master Chef: Yummy skewered maggots
Before eating insects, they should be fed on fresh grains for a couple of days. This will clean out anything unpleasant they may have eaten. They can be eaten raw, but it’s safer to cook them and it will improve the taste.
One common rule of thumb you can follow is:
- Red, orange yellow, forget this fellow.
- Black, green or brown, wolf it down.
4. A urine-powered generator
What’s the Idea?
Four young Nigerian girls have invented a generator that runs on urine. The invention was first displayed in Lagos in 2012. A litre of urine can be used as fuel for generating six hours of electricity.
Problem solved
Power outages happen many times a day in Lagos, and not everyone can afford to have a backup generator. It’s possible that the girls’ idea can be applied beyond just power generators, as gasoline-powered internal combustion engines can be converted relatively easily to run on hydrogen.
From Entrepreneur
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