Industry News & Insights

29 Aug 2022

Singapore scientists on track to commercialize fungi-based protein that upcycles food waste

Singapore scientists on track to commercialize fungi-based protein that upcycles food waste

'Scientists have developed a technique to cultivate a fungi-based food product that could serve as a healthier, high-quality tasting, and greener alternative to plant-based protein. The protein is cultivated from fungi that grow on a base of nutrient-rich food waste, and is being scaled up with collaborators in New Zealand.

Growing from a base of food waste infuses the fungi with more essential nutrients, such as protein, iron, and amino acids.'

This makes them more nutritious than ingredients commonly used in plant-based alternative meat, such as peas, chickpeas, wheat gluten, and soy, according to the team of scientists from NTU Singapore's Food Science and Technology (FST) program.

Meat-like taste from mushrooms
The NTU-developed food product, which is based on the edible white mushroom (Agaricus bisporus), would also address several critiques of plant-based protein, which often need flavoring to be added to taste good, are highly processed, and can lack some essential nutrients.

The fungi-based food product could be more readily accepted by consumers, as it already resembles meat more than other plant-based proteins, shredding similarly to cooked chicken.'

The research team notes that it also tastes more like meat, as it contains higher levels of amino acids, glutamic and aspartic acids, compounds that commonly occur in animals, which give their flesh that trademark 'meaty' flavor.

Greener alternative'
The researchers at NTU's FST program plan to further develop their product to boost its nutritional profile and reduce food waste.'

The cultivation of the NTU-developed food product also offers an opportunity to reuse common food waste and byproducts of agriculture and the food and beverage industry, such as soybean skin, wheat stalk, and brewers' spent grain, a byproduct of the beer-making industry.

It is estimated that globally, around 39 million tons of spent grains and 14 million tons of soybean skin, also known as okara, go to landfill annually.

'Our fungi-based food product is yet another triumph for NTU, as we look to find successful ways to find new uses for products that would otherwise be left to waste. Upcycling these products to cultivate fungi, a food source familiar to Asian consumers, is an opportunity for enhancing processing efficiency in the food supply chain, as well as potentially promoting a healthier non-animal protein alternative to enrich diets,' says Professor William Chen, director of NTU's Food Science and Technology program, who led the development of the food product.

Journey toward commercialization
The Foodbowl, part of New Zealand Food Innovation Network, which helps food businesses and start-ups innovate and commercialize new products internationally, is teaming up with the NFU team.'

Another company that is also collaborating with NTU's FST program to implement the fungi cultivation technology in its food products is Off-piste Provisions, a plant-based meat company based in New Zealand.'

The solution is scheduled for commercialization by 2024.


The researchers at NTU's FST program plan to further develop their product to boost its nutritional profile and reduce food waste.'

The cultivation of the NTU-developed food product also offers an opportunity to reuse common food waste and byproducts of agriculture and the food and beverage industry, such as soybean skin, wheat stalk, and brewers' spent grain, a byproduct of the beer-making industry.

It is estimated that globally, around 39 million tons of spent grains and 14 million tons of soybean skin, also known as okara, go to landfill annually.

'Our fungi-based food product is yet another triumph for NTU, as we look to find successful ways to find new uses for products that would otherwise be left to waste. Upcycling these products to cultivate fungi, a food source familiar to Asian consumers, is an opportunity for enhancing processing efficiency in the food supply chain, as well as potentially promoting a healthier non-animal protein alternative to enrich diets,' says Professor William Chen, director of NTU's Food Science and Technology program, who led the development of the food product.

Journey toward commercialization
The Foodbowl, part of New Zealand Food Innovation Network, which helps food businesses and start-ups innovate and commercialize new products internationally, is teaming up with the NFU team.'

Another company that is also collaborating with NTU's FST program to implement the fungi cultivation technology in its food products is Off-piste Provisions, a plant-based meat company based in New Zealand.'

The solution is scheduled for commercialization by 2024.

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