An Israeli firm has created the first ever 3D bio-printed grouper — which is ready to cook upon "printing." Steakholder Foods has created a non-traditional fish for eating, and it will not harm the ...
Overfishing is depleting the global fish population, while microplastics and mercury pollute the remaining marine life. In response, a biotech firm and an agriculture startup have formed a partnership ...
REHOVOT, Israel, May 3 (Reuters) - Forget your hook, line and sinker. An Israeli foodtech company says it has 3D printed the first ever ready-to-cook fish fillet using animal cells cultivated and ...
The next frontier in food seems to be drawing inspiration from the final frontier. A “Star Trek“-like, food-on-demand 3D printer has just served up a real, cultivated fish fillet for the first time.
Israel's Steakholder Foods and Singapore's Umami Meats teamed up to create grouper fish fillets in a lab. The process involves adding fish and plant cells to "bio-ink" for a unique 3D printer to ...
The firm has created a non-traditional fish for eating, and it will not harm the environment, Steakholder Foods says. REDA&CO/Universal Images Group v An Israeli firm has created the first ever 3D bio ...