Start-up that makes dairy-like fat from yeast joins Food Fermentation Europe

Date:

Food Fermentation Europe (FFE), a trade body that advocates for a faster regulatory system for fermentation-derived foods and ingredients in Europe, has welcomed a new member in Swiss biotech start-up Cultivated Biosciences.

The Horgen-based start-up develops a fat ingredient by turning yeast into ‘yeast cream’ through biomass fermentation. The ingredient is neutral in taste, is GMO-, lactose-, and allergen-free and can be used as a clean-label emulsifier and stabilizer in alt milk, yogurt, ice cream, cream cheese and desserts. The ingredient cannot be used for hard cheeses and whipped cream as it does not have the right fat profile, we were told.

“There is a need for better texture to match the dairy experience and cleaner labels for healthier products – both currently hurdles for the consumption of alternatives,” a spokesperson for the Swiss biotech firm told us.

FFE’s other members include Better Dairy, Bon Vivant, Formo, ImaginDairy, MicroHarvest, Onego Bio, Standing Ovation, Those Vegan Cowboys and Vivici.

Cultivated Biosciences is at proof-of-concept stage currently with an ambition to commercialize its ‘yeast cream’ ingredient next year. Thus, it hasn’t started engaging with European regulators yet.

On joining FFE, CEO and co-founder Tomas Turner said: “Regulatory and policy frameworks significantly influence innovation. We are impressed with FFE’s efforts and are excited to collaborate with them to create better policies for the future of European food production.”

FFE president Jevan Nagarajah added: “We are delighted to welcome Cultivated Biosciences, our second biomass fermentation member. We are excited to continue growing and supporting the EU in becoming a global leader in fermentation-enabled foods.”

As reported​ in sister publication FoodNavigator-Europe​, precision fermentation-derived dairy players have started submitting novel food applications for pre-market approval in the EU – but none of these have been approved yet. Barriers​, such as lengthy dossiers required by EFSA and the generally cumbersome time-frame that takes regulators to assess each application, continue to hamper innovation in the European animal-free dairy space.  

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

More like this
Related

Upgrade to Windows 11 Pro for $20 and unlock advanced features for work, play, and security

Image: StackCommerce TL;DR: Upgrade your PC to Windows 11 Pro...

Code easier for less—Visual Studio 2022 is just $34.97

Image: StackCommerce TL;DR: Boost productivity with Microsoft Visual Studio Professional...

How to get ChatGPT, Gemini, Midjourney, and more for life

Image: StackCommerce TL;DR: Save 82% on a 1minAI lifetime subscription...

Your laptop’s Windows Copilot key can be repurposed soon

Image: Mark Hachman / IDG After kind of giving up...