Sydney startup Vow has partnered with revered Aussie chef Neil Perry to create a trial menu using lab-grown meats, as alternative proteins sneak into the culinary mainstream.
Perry, founder of the Rockpool restaurant group, worked with his head chef Corey Costelloe to demonstrate the way lab-cultured meats could be used in high-end creative cuisine, and to get people thinking a little differently about the opportunities such ingredients present.
The partnership represents a significant milestone for Vow, which was founded by Tim Noakesmith and George Peppou less than 18 months ago.
Over the past year alone, the startup has grown from two co-founders to a team of 16 people, and progressed from producing meat from three species to nine.
It also secured a round of pre-seed funding from Blackbird, and is now gearing up to a larger seed round.
As Vow grows, interest in the alternative meat sector, globally, is growing as well.
COVID-19 led to a spike in sales in plant-based meat alternatives, and in January US-based Memphis Meats raised a massive US$161 million Series B round โ the largest ever for a culture meat business โbacked by the likes of Bill Gates and Richard Branson.
โThereโs heaps more money going into it, sales are skyrocketing across plant-based and fungal categories, and cultured meat has really progressed,โ Peppou says.
A pivotal moment
The six dishes on the trial menu were designed via a creative partnership between Perry and Costelloe and included the likes of a goat cheeseburger slider, alpaca chili tarama, kangaroo crystal dumpling and lamb glassy scallop with tofu and mushroom.
โHaving the support and the interest of someone of the calibre of Neil Perry is a massive deal for us,โ Noakesmith tells SmartCompany.
Partly, it highlights the difference Vow is offering in the alternative meats space.
โThis is not just an opportunity to replicate the food experiences we have today. It actually opens a new era of thinking about the creativity of food,โ he explains.
โPeople who are culinary leaders can think about designing their food from the ground up.โ
Those foods can be more decadent or more exciting than anything the chefs would usually serve, but they can also be functional, offering specialist nutritional properties that have historically been tricky to get.
The partnership is also in line with Vowโs earliest strategy of โworking with the best and the smartest and the most influential in food to create products that are simply better than the meat being produced conventionally todayโ, Noakesmith adds.
And for Peppou, a former chef, the partnership also represented a personal professional highlight. In fact, he admits to being a little starstruck.
โThe idea of walking into a kitchen … with Neil Perry to cook up anything โ let alone to cook up a product that humans are going to be eating over the next few decades โ is one of the most exciting and humbling experiences of my whole life,โ he says.
Perry and Costelloe are not any old professional chefs, Peppou notes. They have the power to influence what people choose to eat in Australian restaurants, and all over the world.
โI think weโre going to look back at this moment in 50 or 100 years as one of the moments where the way we think about food changed forever.โ
โWeโre not going to slow downโ
That said, weโre still a little way off seeing lab-cultured meats pop up on the permanent menus of Rockpool restaurants. Or at any Australian restaurants for that matter.
The founders anticipate the first products coming to market in Asia, where regulators are a little more progressed when it comes to meat alternatives.
In Australia, there are still some regulatory hurdles to overcome, โand for good reasonโ, Noakesmith says.
โAustralia has a remarkably robust food safety reputation,โ he explains.
โItโs going to be a journey of working closely with the regulators, and weโre already having those conversations โฆ Ultimately, from there we can start thinking about the best way to distribute that to consumers.โ
For the time being, the founders are focusing on perfecting their food prototypes, and creating something that performs better than traditional meat. Ultimately, theyโre anticipating a trend and theyโre preparing for it.
โOver the next decade, cultured meat is going to go from this crazy novel idea to be something that youโre just putting in your shopping trolley and cooking up on a Tuesday night,โ Peppou predicts.
The Impossible Burger, for example, has gone from mindblowing to mainstream in a remarkably short space of time.
โThe same thing is going to happen with cultured meat,โ Peppou says.
โAt first itโs going to seem very strange and very foreign, and then before you know it, just in the span of a few years, itโs going to become very mainstream.โ
Part of Vowโs strategy is around marketing, and striving to tackle the โickโ factor around lab-grown foods.
But, the trick is also to make the product taste so good that consumers donโt focus on where it came from.
โItโs about creating products that are so strong that they out-strip peopleโs resistance to change,โ Noakesmith says.
โA really strong focus for us is working with the best in food science and culinary over the next 18 months to create food products and meat products that are just better than what we have today.”
These founders are dreaming big, and theyโre thinking in terms of decades, not in months or years.
While itโs easy to look back at how far the startup has come in the past 12 months, this is also just the beginning for Vow, Peppou says.
โThe thing weโve set out to do is feed billions of people every day,โ he explains.
โWeโre going to be accelerating at this rate for the next decade or longer in order to achieve that mission.
โWeโre absolutely not going to slow down.โ
NOW READ: Has COVID-19 supercharged Australiaโs plant-based meat scene?
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