Well, well, well. It seems the future has finally arrived, and it tastes faintly of regret and industrial lubricant. In a move that has sent shockwaves through the collective gastro-intestinal tract of humanity, the world’s leading food conglomerates have announced that synthetic protein will now constitute the primary source of nutrition for the global population. Goodbye, Sunday roast. Hello, lab-grown sludge.
I first heard the news while nursing a gin and tonic at an airport bar, the only place where one can truly appreciate the irony of progress. The television above the bottles displayed a smiling spokesperson with teeth so white they could only have been bleached by the sheer force of corporate optimism. ‘A new era of sustainable eating,’ she declared, as if she were describing a utopia rather than a dystopia where your dinner is grown in a petri dish by a man in a hazmat suit who hasn't seen the sun in seven years.
Let us examine this brave new world. Synthetic protein, they claim, is the answer to everything: climate change, animal cruelty, world hunger. But at what cost? I ask you, what is the flavour profile of a test tube? In my extensive research (conducted between the hours of 11pm and 3am, fueled by tonic), I have discovered that synthetic protein tastes remarkably like the cardboard that separates frozen pizzas. It has the texture of a sponge that has been soaked in disappointment and then wrung out by a particularly cynical lab technician.
Of course, the announcements were greeted with the usual fanfare. Government officials praised the innovation as a 'game-changer.' Nutritionists nodded gravely while adjusting their spectacles. But nobody, and I mean nobody, asked the important questions. Like, what happens to the cows? And more pressingly, what happens to the whisky and cheese pairing? The latter, I fear, is a casualty we may never recover from.
I visited one of these 'protein farms' to see the miracle for myself. It was a sterile warehouse filled with vats of bubbling beige goo. The workers moved with the robotic efficiency of people who have long since abandoned hope. ‘It’s efficient,’ one of them told me, his eyes as empty as the nutrient broth he was tending. ‘We can feed a billion people with this.’ ‘Yes,’ I replied, ‘but can you make a decent sausage roll?’ He did not laugh. He did not even smile. He just handed me a sample.
The sample came in a small cup, like a hospital urine test but less appetizing. It was warm and grey. I took a bite. The sensation was not unlike licking a battery. The aftertaste lingered like a bad memory. I immediately reached for my flask, a habit I have cultivated over years of dealing with such culinary atrocities. ‘We’ll get used to it,’ the spokesperson had assured me earlier. But I don’t want to get used to it. I want my steak to come from a cow that had a name and a happy life, not from a gene sequence that was spliced together by an intern.
But here we are. The future is now. And it tastes like a politics conference: bland, sterile, and utterly devoid of soul. The supermarkets have already started phasing out real meat. The butchers are closing down. The farmers are weeping into their soil. Meanwhile, the boardrooms are full of men in suits who have never had to cook a meal in their lives, congratulating themselves on their ingenuity.
I suppose I should be grateful. After all, this synthetic protein is sustainable. It is ethical. It is the responsible choice for a planet that we have systematically pillaged. But as I sat in that airport bar, watching the news, I could not shake the feeling that we have traded something precious for something hollow. The joy of a shared meal, the artistry of a chef, the simple pleasure of biting into something that was once alive. All replaced by beige goo from a vat.
So raise a glass, dear readers. Raise it to the end of food as we know it. And if you can, make it a proper steak and a glass of full-bodied red wine. Before they take that away too. Because I have a sinking feeling that the next announcement will be about synthetic gin. And if that happens, I will personally lead a revolution from this very barstool.
