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After the vegan burger, here comes the 'vegan egg'

  (Agence France-Presse)
Rome, Italy
Sat, October 10, 2020

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After the vegan burger, here comes the 'vegan egg' In India, a young company has made a vegan egg its flagship product. (Shutterstock/PhotobyTawat)

W

ith World Egg Day taking place on October 13, an Indian start-up is making headlines with a food innovation that may shock some purist fans of traditional omelettes.

It has created a vegan egg, made exclusively from vegetable proteins. And to top it all off, this “egg” is... liquid!

The egg is one of the most commonly consumed foods in the world. Served scrambled with pancakes in the United States, in a lobster omelette in France, in small pieces in a Thai pad in Thailand, in a bowl of fried rice in Vietnam, hard-boiled and battered in India... Internationally, 145 eggs are consumed per capita per year, according to the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations).

With changes in eating habits and the growing success of the flexitarian diet, this staple food has not escaped notice from researchers and innovators looking to produce an alternative without animal protein.

The worldwide success of meatless patties designed to imitate beef, made famous by American start-ups Impossible Foods and Beyond Meat, has inevitably created interest in making versions of other foods without animal proteins.

In India in particular, where a young company has made a vegan egg its flagship product.

Read also: Eating an egg a day does not increase cardiovascular disease risk, says new study

EVO Foods has developed a recipe based on vegetable protein to make an egg without animal protein. The start-up recognizes that the texture of its innovation is softer than that of an ordinary egg.

And a major difference: The “egg” is totally liquid! The process involves the extraction of proteins from legumes, which are then fermented before being injected with texture agents. The “egg” can be kept in the refrigerator for six months.

This food innovation, which has already gathered American investment, is to be launched in the United States in April 2021.

Is it just another food innovation? Not necessarily. In France, where vegans represent only 0.5 per cent of the population according to estimates by the firm Xerfi, there are also efforts underway to create eggs without any involvement of a chicken.

Two female biology students have made 50 or so attempts to create an “egg” from ingredients of vegetable and mineral origin. Code name for their project: The Merveilloeufs. 

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