Impossible Foods
Impossible Foods Inc. is a company that develops plant-based substitutes for meat products. Founded in 2011, and headquartered in Redwood City, California,[2] the company's stated aim is to give people the taste and nutritional benefits of meat without the negative health and environmental impacts[3][4] associated with livestock products.[5] The company researches animal products at the molecular level, then selects proteins and nutrients from plants to recreate the experience and nutrition of meat products.[5]
Private | |
Industry | Food |
Founded | 2011 |
Founder | Patrick O. Brown |
Headquarters | Redwood City, California, US |
Key people | Dennis Woodside (President)[1] |
Website | ImpossibleFoods.com |
The company's signature product, the Impossible Burger, was launched in July 2016, after years of research and development. The company also makes a plant-based sausage product that started being tested on pizzas sold by Little Caesars restaurants in May 2019.[6][7]
Company and product history
In 2009, Stanford biochemistry professor Patrick O. Brown decided to devote an 18-month sabbatical to eliminating intensive animal farming, which he determined at the time to be the world's largest environmental problem.[8] With other academics, Brown co-organized a conference in 2010 in Washington, D.C., to raise awareness.[9] However, the National Research Council workshop "The Role of Animal Agriculture in a Sustainable 21st Century Global Food System" had minimal impact, and Brown decided soon after that the best way to reduce animal agriculture was to offer a competing product on the free market.[8]
Brown started Impossible Foods in 2011.[10] In July 2016, the company launched its first meat analogue product, the Impossible Burger, which is made from material derived from plants.[11] The company says that making it uses 95% less land and 74% less water, and it emits about 87% less greenhouse gas than making a ground beef burger patty from cows.[12] The plant-based burger has more protein, less total fat, no cholesterol, and less food energy than a similar-sized hamburger patty made with beef.[13] It contains more sodium and more saturated fats than an unseasoned beef patty.[14] The Impossible Burger received Kosher certification in May 2018[15] and Halal certification in December 2018.[16]
On January 7, 2019, Impossible Foods launched a new version of their signature burger, the Impossible Burger 2.0. The company has stated that the new burger is "tastier, juicier and more nutritious – featuring 30% less sodium and 40% less saturated fat than our current recipe and just as much protein as 80/20 ground beef from cows." The new product is also gluten-free, replacing wheat with soy protein.[17]
In 2019, CEO Pat Brown said they are working on "whole cuts of beef", including steak. "If we can make an awesomely delicious world-class steak ... that will be very disruptive not just to the beef industry, but to other sectors of the meat industry."[18]
Technology and FDA approval
Impossible Foods' scientists discovered that heme is a key factor in how meat behaves.[19] Heme is the molecule that gives blood its red color and helps carry oxygen in living organisms.[20] Heme is abundant in animal muscle tissue and is also found naturally in all living organisms.[21] Plants, particularly nitrogen-fixing plants and legumes, also contain heme.[22] The plant-based heme molecule is identical to the heme molecule found in meat.[23][24]
To produce heme protein from non-animal sources, Impossible Foods selected the leghemoglobin molecule found naturally in the roots of soy plants.[25] To make it in large quantities, the company's scientists genetically engineered a yeast and used a fermentation process very similar to the brewing process used to make some types of beer.[26] In 2014, Impossible Foods declared leghemoglobin is Generally Recognized As Safe after testing under FDA oversight,[27] and filed updates with the FDA in 2017 and 2018.[28] The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a "no questions" letter in July 2018, accepting the unanimous conclusion of a panel of food-safety experts that the protein that carries heme is safe to eat.[29] This approval was limited to products cooked in restaurants because soy leghemoglobin required approval as a new food colorant for uncooked products.[30] An FDA rule change that approved the colorant and allows the sale of Impossible Burgers in grocery stores took effect on September 4, 2019.[31]
The company scientists created a chemical library of proteins and fats derived from plants and experimented with them as additional ingredients to mimic the texture of meat.[32] To replicate the fat in hamburgers made from cows, Impossible Foods used flecks of coconut fat, which were mixed with ground textured wheat and potato protein.[33] The potato protein provides a firm exterior when the "meat" is seared.[34] The coconut oil stayed solid until heated, when it melted in a similar manner to beef fat.[35]
Production and availability
Impossible Burgers in restaurants
In 2016 and 2017, Impossible Foods produced Impossible Burgers in both Redwood City, California, and at Rutgers University in New Jersey.[36] Since the production was in relatively small quantities, the burgers were not available at retail locations.[37] Impossible Foods also worked on plant-based products that emulated chicken, pork, fish, and dairy,[38] but decided to concentrate on creating a substitute for the ground beef in burger patties.[39]
The restaurant Momofuku Nishi in New York, owned by David Chang, began serving the Impossible Burger in July 2016.[40] In October 2016, the Impossible Burger became a standing menu item in selected additional restaurants in California,[41] such as Jardinière and Cockscomb in San Francisco, and Crossroads Kitchen in Los Angeles.[42] The Michelin-starred restaurant Public, operated by Brad Farmerie, began serving the Impossible Burger in January 2017.[43]
In March 2017, Impossible Foods announced it would build its first large-scale plant in Oakland, California to produce 1 million pounds of plant-based burger meat per month.[41] In the first half of 2017, the Impossible Burger debuted on the menu of multi-unit franchises including Bareburger in New York City,[44] Umami Burger in California,[45] and Hopdoddy in Texas.[46] In April 2018, White Castle started serving Impossible Burgers. The partnership with White Castle eventually expanded to include all 377 of its locations.[47]
By July 2018, two years after its debut in New York, the Impossible Burger was available at about 3,000 locations in the United States and Hong Kong.[48] By the end of 2018, 5,000 restaurants across all 50 states included the burger on their menus.[49]
In April 2019, Burger King began test marketing an Impossible Whopper using the patty at locations around St. Louis.[50] Later that month, the company announced plans to roll out Impossible Whoppers nationwide before the end of the year.[51] In August, it was officially made available nationwide.[52]
Impossible Burger retail
The Impossible Burger became available in grocery stores for the first time in October 2019, at Gelson's stores, which are only in Southern California.[53] As of May 2020, Impossible Burgers were also available at Fairway Market, Wegman's, Jewel-Osco, Vons, Pavilions, Albertsons in California and Nevada, Safeway in California and Nevada, and various chains owned by Kroger.[54] In April 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the FDA started allowing restaurants to sell Impossible beef substitute to consumers, with an additional printed-out sheet satisfying label requirements.[55]
Sausage
In May 2019, Little Caesars began testing the Impossible Supreme pizza in Florida, New Mexico, and Washington state. The pizza features Impossible Foods' first plant-based sausage product, which CEO Patrick Brown claimed had involved the development of 50 prototype sausage products before Little Caesars began offering it to the public.[56] Impossible sausage sandwiches are being sold at many restaurants, including Burger King and Starbucks.[57]
Financing
Impossible Foods has raised rounds of $75 million and $108 million from investors including Google Ventures, Khosla Ventures, Viking Global Investors, UBS,[58] Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing's Horizons Ventures, and Bill Gates.[59] It was reported that Patrick Brown had turned down an offer of $300 million to buy out Impossible Foods in 2015.[39][60]
In May 2016, an additional $16.5 million was raised from debt financing.[61]
In August 2017, $75 million in additional financing was raised after reaching key objectives,[62] with Bill Gates investing additional money.[63]
In April 2018, an additional $114 million was raised, led by Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and Hong Kong-based Sailing Capital, bringing the total to $372 million.[64]
In May 2019, the company raised $300 million of investment.[65] The total valuation of the company raised to $2 billion.[66] On March 16, 2020, another $500 million was raised.[67]
In total, Impossible Foods has raised $1.2 billion over 12 rounds of funding.[68]
See also
References
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