This Vegetable Tastes Like Bacon And It’s Too Damn Delicious

We bet you won't miss bacon.

Enlarge text
Cover ImageCover image via futuristech.info
Logo

It could be a dream come true for vegans

They call it a seaweed that tastes like bacon and that has twice the nutritional value of kale!

Image via

Researchers at Oregon State University are growing a marine plant called **dulse** and they are planning to use it as a salad leaf, salad dressing, in peanut brittle, rice crackers, bread and even in beer.

This red-coloured type of seaweed has an unbelievable meaty flavour when cooked and is an excellent source of minerals, vitamins and antioxidants, said Michael Morrissey, director of the Food Innovation Center at OSU. When dried, it contains up to 16 percent protein.

Dulse is a "naturally-occurring" red marine algae that grows along the Atlantic and Pacific coastlines. Scandinavians were said to have been eating it for centuries, Morrissey said, despite its high market price of roughly $90 per pound in dried form.

Now, researchers at OSU made a more affordable method of growing dulse in an agricultural setting.

Through this new system, the plants nearly double their weight every ten days, Morrissey said.

Chris Langdon and colleagues at OSU's Hatfield Marine Science Center have been growing dulse as a kind of superfood for the abalone they were studying

They never thought it as a superfood for humans as well.

Nutrition aside, this new strain of dulse can be sustainably raised and harvested with very low environmental impacts, researchers said, since the seaweed only needs saltwater and sunshine to grow.

The scientists hope to begin commercializing some of the early food prototypes this fall, but consumers shouldn't expect to see dulse bacon on the shelves for at least a year, Morrissey said.

Related stories:

LIKE WHAT YOU JUST READ?
Give SAYS Philippines a thumbs up on
[Facebook] (http://facebook.com/saysphilippines) and [Twitter] (https://twitter.com/SAYSPhilippines) or [SUBSCRIBE] (http://says.com/ph/subscriptions) to our newsletter!

Image via

Your daily dose of news? We got them covered for you!

Read more trending stories on SAYS

You may be interested in: