Sunday, April 26, 2026

Opinion: The ‘Vegan’ Label is Losing Power – That’s A Good Thing for Plant-Based Foods

From greenqueen.com.hk

Annamari Jukkola, co-founder and CEO of Finnish dairy-free company Mö Foods, explains why the plant-based movement must embrace the “post-vegan” era

For more than a decade, ‘vegan’ was one of the most potent words in food. 

It signalled conscience, urgency and a deliberate break from industrial animal agriculture. For a time, commercial growth followed that moral energy. But in recent years, retail sales of plant-based meat have declined in several major markets.

In the US, dollar sales fell again in 2025, with unit sales down by more than 10%, and parts of Europe have seen similar softening in volumes. Concern about climate change and animal welfare has not evaporated. What has changed is the context in which food choices are made.

Households are under pressure. Food inflation has lingered, energy bills remain high, and wages have struggled to keep pace. When the weekly shop becomes a calculation rather than an expression of values, shoppers trade down. Premium-priced products are often the first to go,  particularly when they are seen as optional. And much of the plant-based category is still treated that way: placed in separate sections, framed in contrast to the “real thing”, positioned as a substitute rather than an everyday staple.

I say this as someone who grew up on a traditional dairy farm in Finland, where food was our way of life. Movements may begin with identity, but I learned early that anything that endures does so because it works. The foods people grow up with carry weight. They are familiar, trusted, and woven into routine. No one abandons them lightly.

                                                                                                          Courtesy: Mö Foods

If you want people to change what they eat, the alternative cannot simply be different – it has to be at least as good, and ideally better. That’s why the plant-based food movement must embrace the “post-vegan” era: not the abandonment of ethics, but the normalisation of plant-based food. 

The flexitarian majority

The first wave of plant-based innovation was fuelled by urgency and investor optimism. Some products were rushed to market; others promised more than they delivered. Many were marketed primarily under ‘vegan’ or ‘vegetarian’ labels: terms that signalled good intent, but gradually became associated with products that were more expensive, less satisfying, or inconsistent in quality. 

Some shoppers felt misled; others drifted back to familiar habits. Those who continued buying most consistently were the ones whose identities already aligned with the label: vegetarians and vegans.

The issue is simple: there just aren’t that many vegans. Fewer than 1% of the world’s population identifies as vegan. Even when vegetarians are included, the group remains relatively small in most Western markets.

Far larger numbers – over 40%, by some estimates – describe themselves as flexitarian: actively reducing their meat consumption without abandoning it entirely. If the goal is to reduce emissions, land use, and animal suffering, scale matters more than purity. Small shifts adopted by millions outweigh total exclusion practised by thousands.

This is an approach that meets consumers where they are and lowers the barrier to participation, with the objective not to win an identity, but to shift behaviour, repeatedly and at a global scale.

The shift from identity to impact

plant based meat sales
Courtesy: GFI

Every product that moves from the margins to the mainstream faces the same test. Early adopters will tolerate inconvenience because they believe in the mission. Most consumers will not. For broad adoption, the alternative must stand on its own and fit easily into daily life.

We have seen this pattern elsewhere. Renewable energy expanded when it became cheaper. Electric vehicles gained ground when range improved, and costs fell. Organic produce grew when availability widened, and quality stabilised.

Plant-based food is already showing signs of this transition. While plant-based meat has softened in some markets, plant-based milk continues to hold a significant market share, accounting for well over 10% of total retail milk sales in the US, and higher in parts of Europe. Where functionality is reliable, familiarity is high, and price gaps have narrowed, adoption has stabilised.

But performance alone is not enough. The real question is who these products are designed for.  If plant-based food is to move beyond the margins, performance must be defined in everyday terms.

The discipline of the mainstream

                                  Courtesy: Hellmans/Follow Your Heart/Naturli/Quorn/Magnum | Graphic by Green Queen


Most grocery decisions are made in a moment. Shoppers spend little more than 10 or 15 seconds choosing a product on the shelf. In that brief window, familiarity outweighs ideology.

 It begins with price. In an era of rising food costs, few households can treat sustainability as a premium add-on. It continues with taste and functionality. On the farm where I grew up in western Finland, customers noticed the small things: texture, consistency, whether a product behaved the same way every time. If it didn’t, they went elsewhere.

These are not superficial concerns, but the basic conditions of repeat purchase. Cheese must melt. Milk must foam. A meat alternative must hold its own at the dinner table.

Performance must also include transparency. Environmental claims can no longer rely on branding alone. As climate literacy increases, consumers expect evidence on emissions, land use, and supply chains. If plant-based food genuinely reduces environmental harm, that advantage should be measurable.

None of this guarantees success. Some brands will not survive this phase. Investment has already tightened, and in parts of Europe, public support continues to favour established agricultural systems. But industries mature through correction, and those that endure become stronger.

When plant-based stops being oppositional

For years, plant-based food defined itself in opposition to meat and dairy. That framing was necessary at the beginning. But opposition is not transformation. Real impact comes from scale, and, perhaps ironically, scale happens when a product becomes unremarkable, when it blends into weekly shopping lists without fanfare.

The future of plant-based food will not be decided by labels, but by small, ordinary substitutions: an oat-based chèvre paired with a glass of wine, a milk that rounds out a morning coffee, a meat alternative folded into a weeknight pasta. When those choices feel natural rather than ideological, change stops being a statement and becomes a habit.

That is how movements grow up.

https://www.greenqueen.com.hk/vegan-vs-plant-based-labelling-brands-mo-foods/ 

6 Sustainable Kitchen Upgrades to Try

From cnet.com

You may be thinking more about your own environmental impact and how to reduce it. A good place to start is in the kitchen. 

If you want to reduce food waste specifically, meal kits or easy-to-use apps can help. But if you want to reduce waste in general when it comes to your kitchen habits, save energy -- and in turn, save money -- there are simple changes you can make. 

Here are six kitchen swaps that can make an immediate impact. 

1. Use a compost bin

compost bucket full of scraps

                                            It's incredibly easy to begin composting.   

Jenny Dettrick/Getty

Composting can simultaneously help reduce your overall carbon footprint and improve your at-home garden. Plus, in certain areas of the US, such as New York City, composting is even becoming mandatory, so it might be smart to get a jump start now. A compost bin provides a dedicated space for your food waste and helps keep unwanted smells at bay. 

You can keep it simple with a classic plastic bin or take it up a notch with an electric smart compost bin. For more composting tips, here's what you can and can't toss in your bin.

2. Swap disposables out with reusables

If you often find yourself packing lunches or putting leftovers in disposable plastic bags, swap them for reusable Ziploc bags to reduce waste. For larger food storage, reusable beeswax wraps are a great option. 

Another easy swap is to use reusable paper towels. An extra bonus is that they come in numerous cute designs, so you can find some to match any kitchen. 

3. Purchase Energy Star appliances (USA)

In order for an appliance to be labelled an Energy Star product, it must meet a handful of energy-efficient criteria set by the US Environmental Protection Agency or the US Department of Energy. From light bulbs and televisions to refrigerators and furnaces, DOE has set standards regarding these devices and appliances. For example, an Energy Star dishwasher has "improved water filtration, more efficient jets, and dish rack designs that reduce energy and water consumption and improve performance."

Another huge plus is that these types of appliances can even save you money

4. Use an air fryer instead of an oven when possible 

a person using tongs to lift food out of an air fryer

              Air fryers are one of the most versatile countertop appliances.  

Thai Liang Lim/Getty Images

Speaking of saving money, did you know that one of our favourite countertop appliances can help you do just that? Air fryer expert David Watsky discovered that compared to an average full-size electric oven, a standard 4-quart air fryer was 50% more energy-efficient. Compared with an average gas stove, it was 35% more efficient. 

So, if you use an air fryer to cook french frieschicken wings or thighs, instead of opting for the oven, you'll save energy and money without even trying. 

5. Keep track of the food you have

These days, if you need help with something, there's probably an app for it, and that includes lessening food waste. Oh, a potato!, for example, will scan the food in your fridge and then offer up meal ideas so that no single ingredient goes to waste. You can also use ChatGPT to plan meals by feeding it a list of ingredients you already have (no pun intended) and let it give you an AI-created recipe. 

But sometimes, no matter how hard we try, it seems like we can't eat fresh produce before it starts to turn. That's where Shelfy comes in. Its manufacturer, Vitesy, says the Shelfy will extend food freshness up to 12 days as long as you use it as intended, meaning that it needs to be placed as close to the food as possible. 

I tested Shelfy, and I was impressed with its performance and the easy-to-use app it pairs with. The app keeps track of how many times your fridge has been opened, how long it stays open per day, and when it's due for a cleaning. Plus, it offers tips for how to store each type of food in your fridge to extend its shelf life. 

6. Swap out old bulbs with LED ones

Hands reach to replace a bulb in a ceiling light with an LED bulb.

                        LED bulbs are an easy swap to make.    

Virojt Changyencham via Getty

Something as simple as swapping out lightbulbs in your kitchen can also make more of a difference than you may realize. LED lights are energy-efficient and are offered in a variety of styles and colours. Smart light bulbs can also be programmed to turn off during the night in case you forget to flip the switch before bed.

https://www.cnet.com/home/kitchen-and-household/eco-friendly-kitchen-upgrades/

Meera Sodha’s vegan recipe for leek, potato and coconut curry

From theguardian.com

There is plenty of sunshine in this seductive, Sri Lankan-style potato curry that’s chock-full of evocative smells and flavours 

I stitch myself up sometimes by planning on cooking something that’s native to a country – a Sri Lankan potato curry, say – then embellish it with my own desires (lemongrass, leeks, ginger) to such an extent that it can no longer really be called as such. But taste and memory work in mysterious ways. This recipe still evokes Sri Lanka for me: sunshine, spiced earth, the smell of cinnamon bundles and dense forest, and also the sound of the bread vans (playing Beethoven, curiously) and the distinctive squawk of the myna bird. I hope, if you cook it, it might evoke a little Sri Lankan sunshine for you, too.

Leek, potato and coconut curry

                                    Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay

This recipe calls for one and a half tins of coconut milk, so use up the spare half-tin in a smoothie or dal. Buy fresh curry leaves from large supermarkets or an Asian one. Strip the leaves you don’t use, pack them well and freeze for another day. And use the whole leek, unless it’s really fibrous: soak the sliced greens and whites, then use your hands to scoop them into a colander to drain; don’t tip them out or any grit will get in your meal.

Prep 15 min
Cook 35 min
Serves 4

4 tbsp coconut oil
1 cinnamon stick
10 fresh curry leaves
1 tbsp black mustard seeds
4 garlic cloves
, peeled and minced
2cm x 2cm piece fresh ginger, peeled and finely grated
2 green finger chillies, very finely chopped (remove the pith and seeds first, if you prefer less heat)
2 lemongrass stalks, outer husks and top third removed and discarded, the rest finely chopped
1 tsp ground turmeric
3 leeks
 (300g), whites and greens finely sliced, soaked and drained
1¾ tsp salt
800g baby potatoes
, peeled and cut into bite-sized (3cm) chunks
1½ 400ml tins coconut milk
Roti, to serve

Put the oil in a wide, deep pan on a medium heat. Once it’s hot, add the cinnamon stick, curry leaves and mustard seeds, let them sizzle for 20-30 seconds, then add the garlic, ginger, chillies, lemongrass and turmeric, and cook, stirring, for two to three minutes, until fragrant. Add the leeks and half a teaspoon of salt, and cook for six to eight minutes more, until softened.

Add the potatoes and coconut milk, stir to mix, then add 250ml water and one and a quarter teaspoons of salt. Turn up the heat, bring to a gentle boil, then cover, turn down to a simmer and leave to cook for 15 minutes, until the potatoes are tender (test with the tip of a small, sharp knife: it should slip through easily).

Take off the lid, let the curry reduce for a further five minutes, then serve with roti.

https://www.theguardian.com/food/2026/apr/25/leek-potato-and-coconut-curry-vegan-recipe-meera-sodha

UK: The brilliant and excellent underrated Hertfordshire vegan café

From thecomet.net/news

An underrated Hertfordshire cafe has been earning rave reviews and is described as "brilliant" 

Vutie Beets in Letchworth Garden City is a vegan cafe that serves "great" coffee and brunch options.

On Tripadvisor, the spot has a rating of 4.6 out of 5 from more than 105 reviews, including 77 rated 'excellent' reviews.

Elsewhere, on Google Reviews, Vutie Beets has a score of 4.7 out of 5 from more than 510 reviews.

Inside the underrated Hertfordshire cafe

The vegan spot believes in creating a "happier, healthier, more sustainable community through food", according to Vutie Beets.


Owned by duo Harry and Paul, the pair aim to display vegan food and drink and help highlight how "good the lifestyle can be".

Harry bought Vutie Beets in 2019 after taking on a vegan lifestyle in 2016.

Vutie Beets hosts a wide range of community events, including its popular Sunday run and cycle clubs.

Every Sunday at 9am, people gather at the cafe and enjoy either the 5km run or the 20km cycle.
Both events are free, and anyone who takes part gets 50% off their drinks.


For food, Vutie Beets has a wide range of tasty vegan meals, including its best sellers: mixed berry pancakes and focaccia sandwiches.

Guests can enjoy a selection of sweet treats from its popular cake cabinet, displaying freshly baked goods like cookie dough, buns, cakes, sausage rolls, and more.

Taking to Tripadvisor, one recent guest to Vutie Beets shared: "Nice vibe, friendly staff and a really good selection of vegan food and drinks.

"Highly recommended to vegans and non-vegans".

Another customer said: "Brilliant place with excellent service and the coffee is amazing".

https://www.thecomet.net/news/26043513.brilliant-excellent-underrated-hertfordshire-cafe/

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Forget Burgers—Vegan Meat Is Taking on Cultured Bacon, Marbly Steak, and Octopus

From vegnews.com

From whole-cut steaks to hyper-realistic seafood, the next wave of vegan meat is redefining what plant-based protein can be

Ask any long-time vegan: 2016 was a pivotal year for the plant-based sector, with Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods debuting their flagship burgers to the masses, ultimately changing plant-based meat forever. The new, beefy, bleeding burgers were a stark pivot from the vegetable-forward bean burgers of the 20th century.

A decade later, Beyond and Impossible remain at the forefront of the industry and have expanded their portfolios to include plant-based chicken and pork—products engineered to mimic everything from fibrous muscle pull to lightly browned skin and rendered fat.

But now, a new era of plant meat is on the horizon. A number of companies are perfecting specialty meatless meats that move beyond all-purpose proteins like beef, chicken, and pork, and instead tackle regional spice profiles, cuts, and cooking traditions.

                                                                                                        Millennial Flavor Town


Pushing the boundaries of plant-based

At woman-owned Kula, pea protein forms the base of the brand’s heat-and-eat goat curry—an aromatic, hearty staple in Afro-Caribbean cuisine. The protein is structured to hold up in long-simmered sauces, soaking in warming spices and delivering the dense, stew-ready bite associated with conventional goat meat.

The vegan meat purveyors at London-born company This also employs pea protein when crafting its lamb kebabs, designed to char at the edges while staying springy and juicy at the centre. Flavoured with mint and cumin for depth of flavour, these bites come complete with skewers so they’re instantly ready for grilling.

Vegan beef breaks out from the confines of burger patties and crumbly grounds thanks to South Korea’s Millennial Flavor Town. Fermented hedgehog mushrooms, fava beans, and soy are used to create a whole-cut tenderloin complete with melt-in-your-mouth, fatty marbling. When cooked, the marbling softens and bastes the surrounding “muscle,” just like high-end beef cuts.

Seafood in a new light

Mushroom fermentation technology isn’t just breathing new life into beefless beef—it’s also expanding the plant-based seafood category as well. Revo Foods’ The Kraken—one-of-a-kind vegan octopus tentacles complete with suckers and a firm, elastic bite designed to withstand grilling or braising—is crafted from mycoprotein, a fermented fungus-based protein.

Juicy Marbles’ flaky, whole-cut cod fish fillet, created in partnership with Revo, boasts a similar mycoprotein makeup.

                                                                                                                 Juicy Marbles

Beyond fungi and plant ingredients, new technologies are being developed to cultivate real animal protein without slaughter. Cell samples taken harmlessly from living animals are placed inside bioreactors and fed nutrients to grow into real meat, recreating familiar cuts at a cellular level.

San Diego-based BlueNalu uses this technology to produce cultivated bluefin tuna toro, a highly sought-after cut of tuna belly fat prized for its silken texture, high fat content, and buttery mouthfeel. By growing toro instead of depleting tuna from the oceans, BlueNalu aims to usher in a new era of sustainable seafood production that supports ocean diversity.

And to make its flaky white fish and forthcoming eel, Steakholder Foods trades meat-growing bioreactors for 3D printers to transform plant-based and cultivated ingredients into next-generation seafood products.

Global appeal with pork and poultry

Some of the most ambitious advances in meatless meat now revolve around the proteins people eat most worldwide. New York-based MyForest Foods uses oyster mushroom mycelium—the meaty, fibrous root structure of mushrooms—to craft clean-label, plant-based renditions of pulled pork and crispy bacon.

San Francisco start-up Mission Barns innovates by melding cell-grown pork fat with plant-based proteins to mimic pork’s richness and succulence—qualities notoriously difficult to replicate with plants alone. Last year, the company made history when its pork meatballs debuted for a limited run on grocery store shelves, marking the first time cultivated meat was available for purchase in US stores. Next up? Bacon, pepperoni, and sausages.

                                                                                                                    Mission Barns

In Australia, cultured meat company Vow has developed a number of “publicity stunt” bites (including a kangaroo dumpling and a mammoth meatball) to demonstrate its technology, before bringing its cultivated Japanese quail to Singapore—the first government to approve the meat for sale. Vow used the quail to craft a luxurious foie gras, complete with the dish’s signature unctuousness and gentle melt—but without the cruelty.

With cutting-edge technology, compassion for animals, and a hunger for the tastiest options, the plant-based sector is poised for continued innovation. Only time will tell what’s next.

https://vegnews.com/new-generation-of-meatless-meat

Thursday, April 23, 2026

This Earth Day Burger Is Completely Vegan

From plantbasednews.org

This easy burger recipe helps reduce emissions by using plant-based meat! 

As BBQ season picks up, Earth Day is a good moment to rethink what goes on the grill. This Earth Day burger keeps the format people already enjoy but swaps in a plant-based option. It shows how small changes can shift everyday meals without losing familiarity. You still get a stacked burger, toasted bun, and classic toppings, just with a different base.

The burger itself is quick to cook and easy to assemble. The patty cooks in minutes and pairs with lettuce, pickles, and a slice of vegan cheese. Each serving delivers a solid amount of protein and fibre, which helps turn it into a proper meal rather than just a light option. It’s straightforward and fits into a regular dinner routine.

The dill-sriracha relish adds something extra. Blended white beans give it a thicker texture, while pickles, dill, and chili bring sharpness and heat. Add some homemade sweet potato fries to round everything out with a crisp side that works well with the softer burger and sauce.

This Earth Day burger works for spring meals, casual BBQs, or quick dinners at home. It’s easy to repeat and simple to scale up for more people.

This recipe was republished with permission from Redefine Meat.


Prep your Earth Day burger

An Earth Day burger offers a plant-based take on a BBQ classic, paired with a dill-sriracha relish and sweet potato fries for a complete meal.
Cut down on carbon emissions with easy swaps like meat alternatives and plant-based ingredients - Media Credit: Redefine Meat

Ingredients
Burgers
  • 1 pack Redefine Premium Burgers defrosted
  • 2 burger buns
  • 1 head of gem lettuce
  • 6–8 pickle slices
  • Sliced vegan cheese
High-protein burger relish
  • 30 ml ketchup
  • 15 ml vegan mayo
  • 5 ml sriracha or to taste
  • 10 g chopped dill
  • 1 pickle finely chopped
  • Chopped shallot
  • 50 g cooked white beans
Sweet potato fries
  • frozen sweet potato fries
  • 15 ml oil
  • Pinch smoked paprika & dried mixed herbs
  • Salt & pepper

Instructions

Make the sweet potato fries:

  • Heat oven to 200°C. Toss sweet potato fries with oil, salt, pepper, smoked paprika and dried mixed herbs. Roast for 20–25 minutes, turning once.

Make the dill–sriracha burger relish:

  • Blend white beans until completely smooth. Mix with ketchup, mayo, sriracha, dill, chopped pickles and diced shallot. Season lightly with salt and pepper.

Cook the burgers:

  • Heat a pan on medium-high heat. Toast the buns and set aside. Cook patties for 3–4 minutes per side until browned. Add the sliced cheese and cover with a lid or place into the oven to melt.

Build the burgers:

  • Spread relish on both sides of the toasted bun. Add lettuce, burger patty and pickles. Add more relish on top if you like. Serve with a generous portion of sweet potato fries.
Tips:
  • Always toast the buns: it improves flavour and protects against sogginess.
  • Let the patties rest 1 minute: they stay juicier and hold together better.
  • Spread relish on both sides of the bun: for that proper burger-shop feel.