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FDA Supports Innovation of Cell Culture Technology in Foods

The Food and Drug Administration put its support behind cell culture technology for foods intended for human consumption. FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf and the director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition issued this statement:

“The world is experiencing a food revolution and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is committed to supporting innovation in the food supply. As an example of that commitment, today we are announcing that we have completed our first pre-market consultation of a human food made from cultured animal cells.

“The agency evaluated the information submitted by UPSIDE Foods as part of a pre-market consultation for their food made from cultured chicken cells and has no further questions at this time about the firm’s safety conclusion.

“Before this food can enter the market, the facility in which it is made also needs to meet applicable U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and FDA requirements. In addition to the FDA’s requirements, including facility registration for the cell culture portion, the manufacturing establishment needs a grant of inspection from USDA-Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) for the harvest and post-harvest portions and the product itself requires a USDA mark of inspection.

“The regulation of cell culture technology is being done collaboratively and in close partnership with USDA-FSIS for food made from cultured livestock or poultry cells. Under the March 2019 formal agreement, both agencies agreed to a joint regulatory framework wherein the FDA oversees cell collection, cell banks, and cell growth and differentiation. The FDA’s approach to regulating products derived from cultured animal cells involves a thorough pre-market consultation process. While this is not considered an approval process, it concludes when all questions relevant to the consultation are resolved. A transition from the FDA to USDA-FSIS oversight will take place during the cell harvest stage. USDA-FSIS will oversee the post-harvest processing and labeling of human food products derived from the cells of livestock and poultry. This closely coordinated regulatory approach will ensure that cell-cultured products derived from the cell lines of livestock and poultry meet federal regulations and are accurately labeled. Both agencies are working with manufacturers to ensure these products meet all applicable FDA and USDA-FSIS requirements.

“Advancements in cell culture technology are enabling food developers to use animal cells obtained from livestock, poultry, and seafood in the production of food, with these products expected to be ready for the U.S. market in the near future. The FDA’s goal is to support innovation in food technologies while always maintaining as our first priority the safety of the foods available to U.S. consumers. The FDA has extensive experience in food safety assessment across a wide range of food production technologies, including the use of biological systems and biotechnology. The agency is evaluating new substances all the time as industry practices evolve to meet consumer demands and preferences. Food made with cultured animal cells must meet the same stringent requirements, including safety requirements, as all other food regulated by the FDA.

“The FDA is ready to work with additional firms developing cultured animal cell food and production processes to ensure their products are safe and lawful under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. We also plan to issue guidance to assist firms that intend to produce human foods from cultured animal cells to prepare for pre-market consultations. The published draft of this guidance will provide a formal opportunity to the public for comment. We are already engaged in discussion with multiple firms about various types of products made from cultured animal cells, including those made from seafood cells, which will be overseen solely by the FDA. We continue to encourage firms to enter into dialogue with us often and early in their product development phase, well ahead of making any submission to us.”

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Swamp Dragon Liquor Hot Sauce Aims to Slay More Taste Buds, Expand Reach

liquor hot sauceThe owner of Swamp Dragon, the world’s only liquor hot sauce, is raising funds to grow the brand, which is sold online and in more than 1,000 retail stores nationwide.

“I am now raising capital in earnest to prosecute a major scale-up for Swamp Dragon,” CEO Matt Beeson wrote on his LinkedIn page. “Now that the pandemic problems are easing, opportunities that were on hold are returning, and we need investors in order to exploit those opportunities. And it’s a lot.

“If you don’t know, we make the world’s only liquor hot sauce. Bourbon is better than vinegar! We are ultimately differentiated in the market, and the product is attractive to professional buyers,” he wrote.

Beeson is aiming for a six or seven-figure haul, saying the company has “an incredible foundation laid and enormous mass market opportunities (too many, really).”

Other shelf-stable hot sauces rely on an acetic acid (vinegar) as a preservative. Beeson, a hot sauce lover in Baton Rouge, La., didn’t like the overpowering sour taste and aroma of vinegar.

After two years of research, Beeson found that no other hot sauces are based in liquor. Many are infused or flavored with liquor, but none of them contain alcohol (not enough to get drunk and it’s safe for kids). Swamp Dragon is hot sauce reimagined.

Read more in the January issue of Gourmet News. Subscribe now so you don’t miss it!

Getir Goes Bananas for Its 1-Year Anniversary

Getir, the pioneer of ultrafast grocery delivery, is celebrating one year of launching in the United States in Chicago, New York and Boston. Through its revolutionary last-mile grocery delivery service, the Getir app has been opened in the United States more than 40 million times, saving users over 700,000 hours.

To celebrate, bananas, the most popular selling product on the U.S. app, are available for nine cents. According to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average cost of bananas is $0.64 per pound, approximately $0.21 each.

“We are excited to be celebrating our one year anniversary in the United States. We are proud of this accomplishment and all of our teams who have made this first year in the United States successful,” said Langston Dugger, Head of U.S. Operations. “American customers enjoy the convenience and reliability of our service and variety of our products.”

bunch of stats:

Top Ten Selling Products

  • Bananas
  • Avocados
  • Navel oranges
  • Fuji apples
  • Roma tomatoes
  • Gala apples
  • Lemons
  • Sparkling water
  • Blueberries
  • Bottled water

Top Neighborhoods

  • Chicago – River North
  • Boston – Brookline
  • New York – Lower East Side

Distance Traveled

  • Getir has fulfilled orders by traveling over 1.4 million zero-emission miles, equating to 402,000 pounds of CO2 emissions saved
  • The delivery team has clocked enough miles to travel around the world 57 times, three times to the moon and back

Charitable Efforts

  • Donated over 75,000 meals to local nonprofits
  • Saved the equivalent of 8.9 million gallons of water through food donations

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