Lab-grown meat just became legal. Is it any good?
'Chefs are the artists of the food world. They're the ones that ultimately drive food culture,' said Peppou.
Working closely with chefs also ensures quality control and a positive experience for wary first-timers. 'A lot of consumers' first contact [with meat-replacement products] was in retail. They brought it home, they cooked it badly and they were like, 'this shit product tastes like a hockey puck',' said Peppou.
Chef and Vow ambassador Mike McEnearney will serve his popular sourdough bread with Pepe Saya butter and a cultured quail butter at Kitchen by Mike, and his new Melbourne restaurant inside 1Hotel, From Here By Mike, will feature a pan-fried 'Forged gras' on a bed of lentils. The bar upstairs will serve Forged parfait on toasted brioche.
'How often does something brand new come to market? That's what got me,' McEnearney said. 'I'd describe it [to customers] as a different way of farming … it's an educational process,' he added. 'It's not replacing anything. It's helping to support sustainable farming methods.'
Food regulatory body Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) has also passed updated definitions of genetically modified food to address progress in gene technologies while maintaining strong food safety protections, which the regulator says brings Australia in line with international approaches and will ensure the right labelling and oversight.
'Our safety assessment confirms that many modifications achieved through new breeding techniques are equivalent to those from conventional breeding, which is widely recognised as safe,' said FSANZ chief Dr Sandra Cuthbert.
How lab-grown meat gets made
The process of making lab-grown or cultured meat, this masthead was told in a tour of Vow's factory (sometimes referred to as Sydney's first 'meat brewery'), isn't too dissimilar to the fermentation process in brewing beer.
A biopsy, or small tissue sample, of an animal – in this case, a quail – is taken and placed into a 20,000-litre temperature-controlled fermentation tank, which is designed to replicate the body of a quail. Hot water lines the tank, for warmth; oxygen and glucose are pumped in the tank, where the tissue scraping is given plenty of space to grow over the course of a month.
'Harvesting' then occurs every two to three days for about a month, where three-quarters of the glucose mix is removed from the tank and topped up for the growing process to continue. The liquid is then poured into a separator, which sorts out the liquid from the solid meat matter, akin to curd, or blitzed chicken mince.
To sell their products, Vow had to undergo, and co-design, a lengthy regulatory process with food regulatory body – because the category of lab-grown meat didn't exist yet.
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'We are so new, we don't fit into any of the boxes for the food system,' said Peppou. 'Everything which is trivial, should be trivial, is really complex for us.'
Peppou's first time trying his own products in a restaurant was April last year, alongside 14 influencers in a members-only club in Singapore. Now, he will be able to try it in his hometown with his parents at a six-course degustation at Italian restaurant Olio in Chippendale, or the Waratah Hotel with his mates.
Now that Vow has FSANZ approval, the NSW Food Authority will conduct a final audit before awarding a food manufacturers' licence, which will allow it to sell in Australia.
It's been a long journey for Peppou, who had to make 30 per cent of his staff redundant in January. The former biochemist is already eyeing other markets, including the UK, Middle East, and is working with nine regulators.

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Herald Sun
12 hours ago
- Herald Sun
Dimboola is the tiny town that's become Australia's capital of quirk
Don't miss out on the headlines from Lifestyle. Followed categories will be added to My News. Riding to the Never Never is a song from the soundtrack of the 1979 film Dimboola and also an accurate description of my four-hour drive from Melbourne to its namesake town. A place I've never never been despite almost a lifetime living in Victoria. The reason I'm finally visiting Dimboola is because I keep hearing that this wheatbelt town, population 1600, is defying the rural decline and having something of a revival. I also keep hearing about The Imaginarium. Housed in the former National Bank of Australasia (built – appropriately given our theme – in the Renaissance style), The Imaginarium is an extraordinary curiosity shop filled with unique gifts and a giant giraffe whose head almost brushes the 4.5m pressed-tin ceilings. Upstairs there are five guest bedrooms decorated in distinct styles; I'm staying in the Italian room with its jewel-coloured Venetian-glass chandelier and assortment of busts, cherubs and crucifixes. If that sounds a bit quirky, well … welcome to Dimboola. Chan Uoy in Dimboola's Imaginarium. Picture: Visit Victoria The creative forces behind the Imaginarium are Chan and Jamie Uoy (pronounced Oi, as in 'Aussie Aussie Aussie'), Melbourne restaurateurs who made the tree change in 2019. 'The first time I came to Dimboola I felt like I'd entered the twilight zone,' says Cambodian-born Chan, who arrived in Australia as a child refugee in the late 1970s and, last November, was elected deputy mayor of Hindmarsh Shire Council. 'There was no one around!' So the couple decided to create something to boost tourism and lure folks off the Melbourne-Adelaide highway. Enter The Imaginarium. 'We wanted a place that stimulates your mind and your imagination,' Chan says. I could write an entire article about the Imaginarium and the energy and ideas of this dynamic duo – Chan is also the founder of the Wimmera Steampunk Festival, the region's biennial 'carnival of peculiarities', – but there's so much else happening in Dimboola. I want to give credit where it's due. Owners Chan and Jamie Uoy at the Dimboola Imaginarium. Picture: Alex Coppel. New arrivals to the main street of Dimboola include The Forbidden Forest, a showroom of fairytale-inspired spaces conceived by Melbourne transplants Shane and Kylie Harman. Wander through Hansel & Gretel's Candy Haus, Jack & His Beanstalk Farm, The Witches' Lair and more. Each an elaborate stage set where everything, from games and toys, lollies and giftware, is for sale. 'The one big thing we find here is all the businesses work together,' says Shane. 'And because we own our shops, we're the people you see and talk to,' says Kylie. Across the road, Deb Howlett and Mark Gebhardt have opened That Little Vintage Shop with curated sections for men's and women's wear, haberdashery, millinery and kitchenware. Think of it as 'David Jones but with old stuff', says Deb. 'My shop is pretty quirky and not everyone accepts that, but here quirky is the norm.' She assures me that if the rain wasn't tipping down this late-July weekend, 'the street would be chockers'. Potter George Khut in his studio with works by his students. Picture: Kendall Hill Sydney expat George Khut opened Dimboola Pottery this winter in the old CFA shed and now operates a busy roster of four classes a week for the 'clay-curious' and plans to open a gallery showcasing his ceramic creations. He says he knew straight away Dimboola was the right place for him. 'It's affordable here and the community of shopkeepers have been really inviting.' Pop in also to Dimboola Vintage, a trove of gadgets and mechanical wonders, and grab a coffee at Dimboola Store, but try to avoid the Sunday brunch queues. Elsewhere in town, chef Cat Clarke has pimped out the kitchen at the Dimboola Golf Club to run a Thursday-to-Sunday restaurant on the banks of the Wimmera River. I loved the time-warped interiors of burnt orange and brown and her roasted duck with karkalla and muntries jus. 'I just cook with fresh produce ... and bush foods, the oldest ingredients around,' she says. Chef Cat Clarke at Dimboola Golf Club. Picture: Kendall Hill Meanwhile, at the Victoria Hotel, I have a juicy Angus scotch fillet with garlic mash and gravy in The Elbow Room, the one-time ladies lounge now a low-lit den strewn with Chesterfields, upright pianos and artworks. Owners Stoph and Meran Pilmore took over the century-old institution 10 years ago when the pub was mint green with laminate tables. Stoph says Dimboola has 'bucked the trend' of dying country towns and points to initiatives such as Wimmera's Silo Art Trail, said to be Australia's largest outdoor gallery, as driving the tourism boom. Opening soon, a main-street microbrewery called Frank Fox, and the Wimmera River Discovery Trail linking Little Desert and Wyperfeld national parks. Stage one, a walking and cycling path between Dimboola and Jeparit, will launch next month. Just one of many reasons to ride to the Never Never. The Wimmera River, Dimboola. Picture: Visit Victoria The writer travelled courtesy of Visit Victoria. Don't miss this Down the road from Dimboola I spent a wonderful wet morning with volunteers at the Wimmera Mallee Pioneer Museum, a collection of historic buildings crammed with displays of everything bygone, from agricultural machinery to domestic paraphernalia. A must-see. Originally published as Dimboola is the tiny town that's become Australia's capital of quirk

The Age
a day ago
- The Age
‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley
For 70 years, the fictional character of Tom Ripley – a misanthropic, morally ambiguous and shape-shifting antihero – has gripped readers and film-lovers. The creation of American writer Patricia Highsmith, he first appeared in her 1955 novel The Talented Mr Ripley, beginning as a near-destitute IRS stockroom clerk and con-artist living in New York City but evolving into a serial killer who murders and then takes over the identity of Dickie Greenleaf, a wealthy, not-so-talented painter living in the fictional Italian coastal town of Mongibello with a lovely house, a boat and an American admirer called Marge Sherwood. Ripley's evolution is enthralling and mind-boggling. His plan to murder emerges as suddenly as his coveting of Greenleaf's privileged life. Now, Highsmith's most famous character comes to the stage in playwright Joanna Murray-Smith's adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley. Loading Directed by Sarah Goodes (Julia, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), with Will McDonald (Heartbreak High) as Ripley, Raj Labade (The Office) as Dickie Greenleaf and Claude Scott-Mitchell (The Dry, The Last Anniversary) as Sherwood, the play is a pin-sharp study of a complex man and a nail-biting psychological thriller. 'Oh, absolutely, the whole story is about suspense,' Goodes says: 'That gap between something happening and what your response is to it. In rehearsals, we've kept talking about the actual definition of suspense. You're suspended between two things. In a way, the whole story of The Talented Mr Ripley is about that. 'Joanna's written a piece that swings between being a noir film, like The Third Man, to being like a Wes Anderson work, to being a classic Strangers on a Train -style Hitchcock. And there's also direct address. He's got a relationship with the audience. You find out who that is later but really Ripley's telling us the story.' But who is Ripley? A relative nobody, he is sent on an all-expenses paid trip by Dickie's father to convince his son to come home to New York. Dickie's mother has leukemia and his father wants him to take over the family's shipbuilding business. But when Ripley encounters Dickie – magnetically carefree and living a life of luxury and culture on the Italian coast – he cannot follow through with his mission. His ardour for Greenleaf's identity, and desire to escape his own dismal existence, propels him to kill. And then, through extraordinary sleight of hand, he becomes Dickie Greenleaf. 'At the core of Tom is a void,' McDonald says. 'Emptiness. He's this black hole that kind of swallows up Dickie and Marge and Dickie's parents. That, and the deep-seated shame of who he is, really drives the whole piece.' Goodes agrees. 'It's a moral tale in a way,' she says. 'If you don't know who you are, if you don't anchor yourself or have a moral attachment to the world, then you are a risk to society. That's the story of the outsider. 'If you feel like you owe the world nothing, then you can be like Ripley. You have no remorse or regret. You can move through it with this real sense of surgical precision and determination.' Ripley is often labelled a psychopath, and Highsmith, who wrote 22 novels including The Price of Salt (later republished as Carol) and Strangers on a Train, another tale of murder and emotional blackmail, clearly had a thing for psychopaths. She even wondered if she was one herself, writing a diary entry in 1943, 'Am I a psychopath?' She also referred to Ripley as her alter ego, sometimes signing letters 'Love from Tom'. What stands out with Tom Ripley – a person whose exploits would necessitate punishment if exposed – is that he is a character that many fans of the book, film and TV adaptations (Andrew Scott played him in the 2024 Netflix series Ripley) root for. This is despite his identity theft, financial crimes, emotional manipulations and murdering. It's a duality McDonald relishes. 'There was an interview that Andrew Scott gave about playing the character where he said Tom's not inherently bloodthirsty, he's not this horrendous, evil person who just loves murdering people,' McDonald says. 'He's doing it to survive. He thinks it's something that he has to do to just stay alive.' He says Scott-Mitchell is sometimes rattled by his character's duality. 'She says there are times she is looking at me and going, 'Oh, I feel sorry for you',' he says. 'And then other times she is going, 'Oh my god, he's horrible. I hate him'. I love that sense of confusion about him.' Whether you love or hate him, Ripley is a stayer. Anyone wondering if he evades capture need only clock the four subsequent Ripley novels Highsmith wrote, with the last, Ripley Under Water, published in 1991. But is he happy when he gets what he wants? In the 1999 film adaptation directed by Anthony Minghella, Matt Damon as Ripley reflects mournfully towards the final scenes: 'I always thought it would be better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody'. Scott-Mitchell points to strong connections in style and character between Ripley and The Picture of Dorian Gray. 'When you think about it, Dorian and Tom are both characters who are completely consumed by objects and beauty,' she says. 'And they both end up in a very similar place.' McDonald agrees. 'With Dorian, he's beautiful and he's gorgeous, but he is known throughout London as a scoundrel. He's been corrupted,' he says. 'His soul has been destroyed by what he's done and he's alone forever. A similar thing happens to Tom. 'There's this wonderful moment in the book where he realises that, in the process of becoming Dickie Greenleaf and gaining all his things, by murdering him he can never let anyone be close to him ever again. 'He'll have all these beautiful things and live this beautiful life, but what he really wanted and prayed for – love and closeness – he'll never get it. In that sense, he fails in his objective.' He does, however, hold up a mirror to people's secret thoughts. Loading 'Joanna has written the play in a way that talks to the inner demons in all of us,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We all have something sinister in our minds, whether we want to admit it, or even that we're conscious of it. You have these moments where you're listening to him and you're like, 'Oh, yeah, I see where he's coming from.' Then you step back and go, 'Well, that feels a bit uncomfortable.'' Most of The Talented Mr Ripley's creative team have connections to work about Highsmith. Murray-Smith wrote the play Switzerland, a fictional look at the last years of Highsmith's life, now being turned into a movie starring Helen Mirren. The co-premiere of the production at STC in 2014 was directed by Goodes and designed by Scott-Mitchell's father, Michael Scott-Mitchell. Goodes says one of the reasons Kip Williams commissioned Murray-Smith to adapt the work when he was STC's artistic director was to continue such connections, primarily by giving new roles to the next generation of Australian actors. 'The thing about this piece is that it's about people who are not fully formed yet,' Goodes says. 'They're in their 20s. This is the first time Ripley commits murder. In the other books, he's an established murderer. So the emphasis was to find a group of young, amazing, next-generation actors to play it – to find the next big names on stage and screen. That was a real starting point. 'Theatre companies are under pressure to sell tickets, so they put known people on stage. But you need to be finding the next people that are going to be those known faces in the future.' In that vein, too, The Talented Mr Ripley explores issues confronting the next generation, particularly with social media, surveillance, AI and identity theft. 'There's this whole mirror world of our identity online,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We might have a social media profile that's a particular way we present ourselves, but then there's us in the flesh. Stripping that whole concept back to theatre is a really wonderful way of looking at it. Who are we? Which one is us? What makes you, you?'

Sydney Morning Herald
a day ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘A risk to society': The next-gen stars tapping into the dark heart of The Talented Mr Ripley
For 70 years, the fictional character of Tom Ripley – a misanthropic, morally ambiguous and shape-shifting antihero – has gripped readers and film-lovers. The creation of American writer Patricia Highsmith, he first appeared in her 1955 novel The Talented Mr Ripley, beginning as a near-destitute IRS stockroom clerk and con-artist living in New York City but evolving into a serial killer who murders and then takes over the identity of Dickie Greenleaf, a wealthy, not-so-talented painter living in the fictional Italian coastal town of Mongibello with a lovely house, a boat and an American admirer called Marge Sherwood. Ripley's evolution is enthralling and mind-boggling. His plan to murder emerges as suddenly as his coveting of Greenleaf's privileged life. Now, Highsmith's most famous character comes to the stage in playwright Joanna Murray-Smith's adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley. Loading Directed by Sarah Goodes (Julia, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), with Will McDonald (Heartbreak High) as Ripley, Raj Labade (The Office) as Dickie Greenleaf and Claude Scott-Mitchell (The Dry, The Last Anniversary) as Sherwood, the play is a pin-sharp study of a complex man and a nail-biting psychological thriller. 'Oh, absolutely, the whole story is about suspense,' Goodes says: 'That gap between something happening and what your response is to it. In rehearsals, we've kept talking about the actual definition of suspense. You're suspended between two things. In a way, the whole story of The Talented Mr Ripley is about that. 'Joanna's written a piece that swings between being a noir film, like The Third Man, to being like a Wes Anderson work, to being a classic Strangers on a Train -style Hitchcock. And there's also direct address. He's got a relationship with the audience. You find out who that is later but really Ripley's telling us the story.' But who is Ripley? A relative nobody, he is sent on an all-expenses paid trip by Dickie's father to convince his son to come home to New York. Dickie's mother has leukemia and his father wants him to take over the family's shipbuilding business. But when Ripley encounters Dickie – magnetically carefree and living a life of luxury and culture on the Italian coast – he cannot follow through with his mission. His ardour for Greenleaf's identity, and desire to escape his own dismal existence, propels him to kill. And then, through extraordinary sleight of hand, he becomes Dickie Greenleaf. 'At the core of Tom is a void,' McDonald says. 'Emptiness. He's this black hole that kind of swallows up Dickie and Marge and Dickie's parents. That, and the deep-seated shame of who he is, really drives the whole piece.' Goodes agrees. 'It's a moral tale in a way,' she says. 'If you don't know who you are, if you don't anchor yourself or have a moral attachment to the world, then you are a risk to society. That's the story of the outsider. 'If you feel like you owe the world nothing, then you can be like Ripley. You have no remorse or regret. You can move through it with this real sense of surgical precision and determination.' Ripley is often labelled a psychopath, and Highsmith, who wrote 22 novels including The Price of Salt (later republished as Carol) and Strangers on a Train, another tale of murder and emotional blackmail, clearly had a thing for psychopaths. She even wondered if she was one herself, writing a diary entry in 1943, 'Am I a psychopath?' She also referred to Ripley as her alter ego, sometimes signing letters 'Love from Tom'. What stands out with Tom Ripley – a person whose exploits would necessitate punishment if exposed – is that he is a character that many fans of the book, film and TV adaptations (Andrew Scott played him in the 2024 Netflix series Ripley) root for. This is despite his identity theft, financial crimes, emotional manipulations and murdering. It's a duality McDonald relishes. 'There was an interview that Andrew Scott gave about playing the character where he said Tom's not inherently bloodthirsty, he's not this horrendous, evil person who just loves murdering people,' McDonald says. 'He's doing it to survive. He thinks it's something that he has to do to just stay alive.' He says Scott-Mitchell is sometimes rattled by his character's duality. 'She says there are times she is looking at me and going, 'Oh, I feel sorry for you',' he says. 'And then other times she is going, 'Oh my god, he's horrible. I hate him'. I love that sense of confusion about him.' Whether you love or hate him, Ripley is a stayer. Anyone wondering if he evades capture need only clock the four subsequent Ripley novels Highsmith wrote, with the last, Ripley Under Water, published in 1991. But is he happy when he gets what he wants? In the 1999 film adaptation directed by Anthony Minghella, Matt Damon as Ripley reflects mournfully towards the final scenes: 'I always thought it would be better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody'. Scott-Mitchell points to strong connections in style and character between Ripley and The Picture of Dorian Gray. 'When you think about it, Dorian and Tom are both characters who are completely consumed by objects and beauty,' she says. 'And they both end up in a very similar place.' McDonald agrees. 'With Dorian, he's beautiful and he's gorgeous, but he is known throughout London as a scoundrel. He's been corrupted,' he says. 'His soul has been destroyed by what he's done and he's alone forever. A similar thing happens to Tom. 'There's this wonderful moment in the book where he realises that, in the process of becoming Dickie Greenleaf and gaining all his things, by murdering him he can never let anyone be close to him ever again. 'He'll have all these beautiful things and live this beautiful life, but what he really wanted and prayed for – love and closeness – he'll never get it. In that sense, he fails in his objective.' He does, however, hold up a mirror to people's secret thoughts. Loading 'Joanna has written the play in a way that talks to the inner demons in all of us,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We all have something sinister in our minds, whether we want to admit it, or even that we're conscious of it. You have these moments where you're listening to him and you're like, 'Oh, yeah, I see where he's coming from.' Then you step back and go, 'Well, that feels a bit uncomfortable.'' Most of The Talented Mr Ripley's creative team have connections to work about Highsmith. Murray-Smith wrote the play Switzerland, a fictional look at the last years of Highsmith's life, now being turned into a movie starring Helen Mirren. The co-premiere of the production at STC in 2014 was directed by Goodes and designed by Scott-Mitchell's father, Michael Scott-Mitchell. Goodes says one of the reasons Kip Williams commissioned Murray-Smith to adapt the work when he was STC's artistic director was to continue such connections, primarily by giving new roles to the next generation of Australian actors. 'The thing about this piece is that it's about people who are not fully formed yet,' Goodes says. 'They're in their 20s. This is the first time Ripley commits murder. In the other books, he's an established murderer. So the emphasis was to find a group of young, amazing, next-generation actors to play it – to find the next big names on stage and screen. That was a real starting point. 'Theatre companies are under pressure to sell tickets, so they put known people on stage. But you need to be finding the next people that are going to be those known faces in the future.' In that vein, too, The Talented Mr Ripley explores issues confronting the next generation, particularly with social media, surveillance, AI and identity theft. 'There's this whole mirror world of our identity online,' Scott-Mitchell says. 'We might have a social media profile that's a particular way we present ourselves, but then there's us in the flesh. Stripping that whole concept back to theatre is a really wonderful way of looking at it. Who are we? Which one is us? What makes you, you?'