Comment on Ah sweet!
tobogganablaze@lemmus.org 2 months ago
It’s not like they can check what kinds of cells you put in. No need to made this weird by cultivating human meat.
Comment on Ah sweet!
tobogganablaze@lemmus.org 2 months ago
It’s not like they can check what kinds of cells you put in. No need to made this weird by cultivating human meat.
volvoxvsmarla@lemm.ee 2 months ago
The kit likely is optimized for human muscle cells and might not perform as well with other human cells or muscle cells from another species or even not at all. The other question is where would you find livable cells from a cow or whatever that you wanted to cultivate. I doubt that your refrigerated steak has viable cells.
tobogganablaze@lemmus.org 2 months ago
I don’t think the requiernments for mammalian muscles cells are that different from each other. It might be optimized for a specific animal, but I’m pretty sure it will still work in general or it would only take very small adjustments to make it work for a different animal.
Yeah, you’d need a live or very recently deceased cow. But it should be easy enough to obtain some samples. Before or during regular slaughter. And once this method is viable and widespread enough there will probably “biopsy cows” that just get pricked for cell samples all day.
volvoxvsmarla@lemm.ee 2 months ago
It’s a DIY kit for layers to play around at home. I don’t know where I would obtain samples before or during regular slaughter for my 49,99€ kit from Amazon tbh
tobogganablaze@lemmus.org 2 months ago
Ask a local farm or butchers shop for example.
But yeah, it’s probalby more of a toy and I doubt that growning your own steak at home will catch on. You need industrial scale meat cultivation if you want to compete with the current convinence and price of meat.