15 Jul '15 10:52>
http://phys.org/news/2015-07-seaweed-bacon.html
Originally posted by sonhouseYeah, but I would want to taste it myself before I believe it. I suspect it would be a lot like a soy burger. When I tasted one it didn't taste anything like beef to me. I have never bought soy burgers again....yuck!
Well, there is this silly possibility....
Originally posted by sonhouseNo, it doesn't. Vegans convince themselves to believe that it does. Omnivores know better. It's like that soy meat that also tastes "just like real meat". Yeah, if you serve it to your parents they're going to be civiilsed and pretend you didn't just give them a half-tasting chunk of rubber to chew. Next try it in a double blind test...
http://phys.org/news/2015-07-seaweed-bacon.html
Originally posted by FabianFnasWe had something like that in Alaska where I used to live long ago, a huge mushroom the size of a dinner plate, cooked, it tasted a bit like bacon also. I loved those mushrooms! We had a real mushroom steak! And for free! they were all over the place at the base of trees.
Where I live we have a kind of mushroom in the woods. It's called "Pig's ears" (translated).
When you fry it in a pan it gets the taste of bacon. Quite interesting! 🙂
Originally posted by sonhouse"Pig's ears" are small as cat's ears, whitish, grows in clusters on dead tree stumps. When prepared and eaten, they have no visual resemblence as bacon nor meat.
We had something like that in Alaska where I used to live long ago, a huge mushroom the size of a dinner plate, cooked, it tasted a bit like bacon also. I loved those mushrooms! We had a real mushroom steak! And for free! they were all over the place at the base of trees.
Originally posted by FabianFnasI think they were called 'plate mushrooms' by the locals. Have no idea what the scientific name is. I was 15 ATT.
"Pig's ears" are small as cat's ears, whitish, grows in clusters on dead tree stumps. When prepared and eaten, they have no visual resemblence as bacon nor meat.
Can it be the same? What do you call those in Alaska?
Originally posted by sonhouseThe taste cells on our tongue and our smell cells in our nose must have a specific molecule indicator for the bacon aroma. This 'bacon tasting/smelling' molecule that the tongue/nose recognize as bacon, is this exactly the same molecule from bacon, the Alaskan plate mushroom, the Swedish 'pig-ear' mushroom and the seeweed? Or can different molecules generate the same bacon sensation?
I think they were called 'plate mushrooms' by the locals. Have no idea what the scientific name is. I was 15 ATT.