Skip to main content

Say hello to Impossible Pork, the next generation of fake meat

impossible pork bao dumpling
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Impossible Foods, the company behind the Impossible Burger and one of the leaders in the rapidly growing “fake meat” industry, announced its next product at CES 2020: Impossible Pork. A plant-based substitute for ground pork, promises the flavor and texture of pork with far less of an environmental impact. It’s also gluten-free and aimed at kosher/halal certifications.

According to Impossible Foods, Impossible Pork’s flavor will convey “depth and umami richness without being gamey or overpowering.” The company also claims the product should work for various recipes that calls for ground pork, whether you want to fry up some sausage patties for breakfast or caramelize some pork for a rice bowl.

Recommended Videos
Impossible Pork was selected by our editors as the best product in the Tech for Change category at CES 2020. Check out more of our Top Tech of CES Award winners.
Best of CES 2020 Tech for Change
CES 2020

Impossible Foods attended CES last year, too, showing off its second-generation Impossible Burger, a recipe that stunned us with how much it resembled real beef — all thanks to a molecule called “heme,” which gives meat its distinctive flavor but can also be found in plants. We were so impressed, we crowned it the Top Tech of CES. Since then, the Impossible Burger has become a bona fide cultural sensation, showing up in restaurants (including Burger King) and stores across America.

Impossible Pork bahn mi
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Impossible’s founder Patrick Brown says the company’s mission is to “eliminate the need for animals in the food chain and make the global food system sustainable,” and giving meat eaters an environmentally-friendly alternative is crucial. Raising animals for meat consumes huge amounts of water and land, and factory farming is an enormous source of pollution.

Pork is already a massive industry, and still expanding. Aside from its environmental impact, it poses distinct threats to public health. Commercial pigs use a lot of antibiotics — one report from the Natural Resources Defense Council estimates 27 percent of “medically-important” antibiotics go to pigs — and that’s a problem, because excessive antibiotic use contributes to antibiotic resistance in bacteria. Antibiotic resistance is already a public health hazard, with the Center for Disease Control estimating 35,000 deaths in the U.S. each year, and although researchers are working on tools to combat resistance, the threat is growing.

Impossible Foods hasn’t revealed any details about when it’s pork substitute will reach the mass market, though, a preseasoned form, dubbed “Impossible Sausage,” is set to debut in the Impossible Croissan’wich at six Burger King locations come late January. Given the swelling demand for fake meat around the world, however, it will probably be a hit no matter what form it takes.

Follow our live blog for more CES news and announcements.

Will Nicol
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Nicol is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends. He covers a variety of subjects, particularly emerging technologies, movies…
Qualcomm says 2020 is the year 5G will finally go mainstream
Cristiano Amon at CES 2020

Qualcomm is all-in on 5G and thinks you will be too soon enough. Sure, there's been skepticism about the newfangled mobile tech, but it won't have an impact on adoption rates. Two hundred million 5G smartphones will ship in 2020, said Cristiano Amon, president of Qualcomm, at the company's CES 2020 press conference Monday. And there will be 1 billion 5G connections by 2023, he added.

"I repeat: The best 4G smartphone you can buy today is a 5G smartphone," Amon said. And when it comes to that skepticism, Amon points to the history of networking tech in the U.S.

Read more
Why General Motors won’t be showing its next electric car at CES
Cadillac electric crossover

Previous

Next

Read more
Microsoft says its next-generation console is actually just called Xbox
Xbox Series X

Microsoft revealed its next-generation mammoth of a game console, the Xbox Series X, during The Game Awards 2019, but it appears that is just one of a few consoles that will be available. As such, this generation, we'll just be calling the system "Xbox."

Speaking to Business Insider, a Microsoft representative said this generation's line of systems will be "Xbox," much like "Xbox One" was used this generation despite the later release of the Xbox One S and Xbox One X consoles. Xbox Series X will be the first of these, with the representative adding that it "adds room for additional consoles in the future."

Read more