A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - Are The Vegans Right? ft. Vladimir Mićković
Episode Date: September 11, 2024Today, Josh and Nicole are joined by Vladimir Mićković, founder of Juicy Marbles --a plant-based meat company, to explore veganism and the vegan diet. Leave us a voicemail at (833) DOG-POD1 Check ou...t the video version of this podcast: http://youtube.com/@mythicalkitchen To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
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So whenever my husband and I moved in together, we started doing something called microdosing
responsibility because we only lived with our parents beforehand.
And the first thing that we did was buy plants to learn how to take care of them, nourish
them and make them feel good.
But recently some of our plants have been dying and I took the initiative to ask people for help.
I started asking people that I know are great plant parents
what to do and they've slowly been getting better and better.
I think it's a really important thing to be able to learn new skills
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be more mindful and take a lot of joy in little things.
Like, I don't have plants,
but like actually enjoying my pet, right?
This sounds so lame.
Like staring into Pippen's eyes
and really being like, wow,
what a beautiful thing that I do have this responsibility
and I do have this fun little relationship.
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Listen, you can convince me that a hot dog is a sandwich, but you can't convince me that a carrot is a hot dog.
It's all liquid smoke and mirrors.
Oh, come on guys.
Join me and let's eat some plant-based ribs
with edible bones.
Yeah!
This is a hot dog is a sandwich.
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
Hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
What? Welcome to our podcast, A hot dog is a sandwich. A hot dog is a sandwich. What?
Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog Is A Sandwich,
the show we break down the world's biggest food debates.
I'm your host, Josh Scherer.
And I'm your host, Nicole Inayiti.
And today we have a very special guest joining us today.
Please welcome the co-founder
and chief brand officer of Juicy Marbles,
the first to create a 100% plant-based marbled steak
and ribs with bones.
Vladimir Michkovich, welcome to the show, brother.
Buongiorno.
Buongiorno.
Well, Nicole speaks the third most Italian here,
so Nicole, hit him with a little bit of it.
Buongiorno, principessa.
Che cosa? Was that good?
That's the whole vocabulary that I also have.
Oh my gosh, great. Okay, we're on the same page.
I was only taught the worst things you can say
in the Roman dialect, like mortaci dua, porco dio,
and I don't know what it means.
Mortaci dua probably means die, muerto.
But I think it's like I'm gonna dig up your ancestors.
The Italians have got really inventive insults,
but I'm glad to me.
What's the dua in there? I think it's twice. I think it's like
your ancestors are buried I'm gonna bring it back up and then kill them again and bury them. It's like
that's metal. And in two words to be able to convey that. I love that. Unreal. Hey speaking of dead
ancestors no Vladimir you invented an incredible product or at least part of the team that invented
an incredible product that absolutely floored Nicole and I
when we first saw it.
It's called Juicy Marbles, and to us,
I mean, I saw this and I was like,
this is the next wave of innovation
in the plant-based meat department,
something that we've seen really explode
over the last 10 years with a lot of investment.
Tell us about Juicy Marbles, man.
Mm, nice, nice, wide question. Just setting me up to start meandering all over the place.
Meander, we encourage it.
Yeah. So yeah, we make plant-based whole cuts. I'm very flattered by your introduction, by
the way. Thank you very much.
Good job, Josh. I'm grateful. So we just a bunch of friends started a company because well
it was I think we all just really wanted to work with food if I'm quite honest
and that's been a wish of mine you know I can't speak for everybody so I'm gonna
just tell my part of the story and I think the story. And I think a lot of it, I think a lot of it also is part of other journey, but I can't speak for all of us.
So I'll just say the following, I really have been influenced by my mom's cooking and the
whole hosting and thinking about food in a elevated manner comes from the culture that I grew up, which
is the Balkans.
And then after many years of being just in an industry that is, I worked in advertising,
I worked in design, and I just started not liking this client work and so forth.
So that drew me to open a restaurant
because I really, really, really wanted to work with food.
The restaurant died during COVID,
and then we came together bound by cosmic forces
and founded Juicy Marbles.
And it was the product I didn't invent.
I cannot take that credit.
It was created by two of four founders
while they were in a dorm room.
So it's a very, very typical startup story.
It's not a garage, it's a dorm room.
So yeah, that's kind of how we got together.
And these guys created this crazy texture, yeah.
and these guys created this crazy texture, yeah. They created a way to make a very, very convincing texture
and we just gathered around them like moths to the flame
and stuff started happening.
That's incredible.
Now we're here three years later.
We have your newest product.
Yeah.
Because you mentioned the whole muscle cuts,
which that was the thing that we first saw on the website.
Yeah, the food photography. It was a filet. I was like, oh my god, this is insane. How did they do that?
So I was from someone who like, you know, worked in like product development and research
and development and even food photography. I was like, holy cannoli, how the heck do
they do this? So we have your ribs here.
I still don't know.
It's incredible. I still don't know. It's incredible.
I still don't understand.
We're gonna dive into one.
Can you pass me a rib?
I got you.
Oh, how did you make it?
So we made a dry rub, pretty simple dry rub.
Chili powder, paprika, garlic, brown sugar, salt,
all that stuff, a lot of black pepper.
And then we just kind of blasted it in the oven
to get a little bit of caramelization on it.
Brush it with a little bit of sauce.
Cheers.
Touch our vegan ribs together.
This is so far beyond any plant-based meat
that I've ever seen.
It's the striations.
It's the meat muscle striations
that's sending me for a loop right now.
Mm, this is good.
This is insane, man. And we, okay, one thing I want
to ask is... I didn't know this was going to be like me watching two people eat. That was what
your team told us. They said he really likes watching people eat. Yeah. And so we're just
going to park them in front of you. It was a blurb. It was a blurb. They got me again. They got me
again. I mean, no BS. This is far and away the best vegan meat or best plant-based meat that you've ever had, right?
Yeah.
No doubt.
It's really damn good.
My question is, and I know this is always a loaded phrase of like,
who do you want to buy your product?
Because it's like, whoever has money and wants to put it in their mouth.
Everyone would be nice.
Yeah.
No, but I guess my more specific question is what percentage of like vegan slash plant-based
dietary aficionados versus omnivores do you expect to buy the product?
If you were a Bettenman.
I'd lose a lot of money in that one, you know, whatever I bet, you know, because I feel there's
just it's so hard to put a pulse on that exact.
Just to go to the initial question there,
this question gets asked.
I think every journalist out there says,
so who is your audience?
Omelette wars or meat eaters or vegans?
And then I just don't know how to think about people
in that way.
Because just in this question, it kind of
assumes that these are two homogenous groups
with the same value systems and lives and so forth.
So you can kind of bulk them together and talk,
but I don't think people,
I don't think it really gives you any kind of idea
if you say meat eater, who that person is.
Yeah, very true.
Or vegan for that matter. So I have no idea,
honestly, you know, and I know that the Lords of Marketing would probably be upset that we don't
have this, you know, profile of a person that we market to. But I think we kind of try to just think of what we like. And I don't know, I like
food, I like eating with friends and enjoying it and all that. I don't know. And then we
kind of think of stuff like that when it comes to marketing communications. So ultimately,
I wish the juicy marbles would be perceived as just yet another food brand, which you either like or
you don't, which I feel that's the case with food. It either works for you, you know, flavor-wise and
like the later how you feel or it doesn't. That's my, that's my dream. But I have no idea how to get there in this cultural landscape, which is which favors the extremes
in terms of narrative
Well, it is a really interesting cultural landscape right now
Especially as you look to like the what I view is like the promise of plant-based meat, right?
Like I remember when the future it's the future but like impossible and beyond when they came out
It was seen as such a massive
But like impossible and beyond when they came out it was seen as such a massive
Not only innovation in food, but like a tech innovation and they got a ton of tech VC money Yes, Silicon Valley like bananas. They want bananas
But when I learned that the innovation in beyond with all due respect to their product, which I think are like perfectly fine
Yeah, they just put like some beet juice in it
And if you cook it to not fully done the beet juice leaks out of it
So it bleeds like meat and I was like this does seem like a little bit of smoke and mirrors in the technology like
Morning Star farms. I was thinking Boca burgos.
Right
Falafel to me is the perfect veggie burger and it was invented 8,000 years ago in Egypt
You know like some of this it's not exactly new new but what you're doing does seem
You know, like some of this, it's not exactly new new, but what you're doing does seem incredibly new. How do you think like the innovations of Beyond and Impossible and what they did specifically to the American market sort of like affects how your product is perceived?
Good question.
It's also been like a little bit politicized, right?
In the sense of like plant based meat is coming for the American farmer and they're trying to take the beef off of your table. It's hard to really pinpoint the details, but on a general macro scale, I think it offended
people how these companies came.
I feel like we really cherish food culture and it's been thousands of years in development.
And I think somewhere in the communication,
I'm not going to break down where but some throughout all of it, the message was akin
to you are a bad person if you continue eating meat from now on.
Yeah, the ethical nature.
Yeah.
You know, it wasn't directly spoken like that but it was somewhat branded in that way.
And I think also the attachment to veganism, which is,
I think, a very admirable ideology, but it's really hard for people
to get into stuff just like that when it's identity driven.
Fair. Yeah. And it, these forces are so much bigger
than we imagined that I think it took people,
people took it personally in a way.
So I think it didn't, as much as they were trailblazers
and they opened up the space,
so I'm like, eternally grateful at the same time,
right now, everybody associates us
with veganism and animal rights and environmentalism and people ask me about
emissions and I'm like, I am not a climate scientist. I'm deleting all my admissions questions. I follow you, yeah. And you, you know, you never say like to your buddies,
like, hey, wanna come over for some environmentally
friendly tapas, you know, we're gonna be,
it's just this whole notion, I think we had to take
a stop somewhere, cause you know, if we go in further,
it was like, first they took our sugar,
and then they took our carbs, and then, you know,
they came for the meats, and then're like holy right there stop right now and I
think that needs to be respected how are we look at it and you know and nobody can just
act objectively you know like I can I can say yeah ideally we were all compassionate
and looking out for the big picture and the environment
and the animals and every neighbor and everything.
But I don't think culture functions that way.
People wanna retain some semblance of fun loving.
And I think until plant-based meats become better
and more convenient, which is gonna take time and culture is gonna evolve slowly, And I think until plant-based meats become better
and more convenient, which is gonna take time and culture is gonna evolve slowly,
it's gonna be nice and easy.
You know, like these companies came 10 years ago,
they said 10 years away, 10 years from now,
it's gonna be a vegan society.
Yeah. Whoa.
I don't know.
That was, I think, a good way to get VC money.
Apparently it was a great way to get VC money
It almost reminds me of the way that tofu was perceived still is perceived by a lot of like white Americans in the 80s and 90s
As like a meat alternative and it was sort of devoid of the actual
Culture that is like thousands of years old in East Asia, right? Yeah
and so there's a lot of people that have this negative perception of tofu in the same way
They may have a negative perception of plant-based meats because they associate it with bland crappy
Moralistic vegan cooking when if you've ever had like mapo tofu, it's the opposite of bland
It is my god. What a flavorful thing
So the opposite of land and this is the opposite of. Like. But this is the thing we're not talking, you know, the debate wasn't around,
hey, we're adding this new amazing thing into the food culture, but it's like,
oh, the food culture and everything, you know, is morally wrong.
We're going to have to completely change it.
This is the product.
And then, you know, what proceeded to happen was a lot of copycats jumping on the green
money train and making absolute garbage products, you know, like retailers putting out their
versions of burgers and sauce.
I mean, everybody was racing to put out plant-based anything.
You remember, it was like crazy.
There was nothing even mattered. Like you could coagulate starch and put some yellow color on that and call it
cheddar and that was it, you know, it was just absolute pandemonium.
And you know, then some people for them, that was the first time they
tried something plant-based this hyped up future of food.
And like, man, are we going to let these nerds dictate what the food culture is?
I think people respond in that way. So yeah, I mean it's interesting. It both helped
the ascension of impossible and beyond, but it also created a communication nightmare.
created a communication nightmare. Right now it's just unavoidable and it's super tense. So yeah, I don't know. I mean, I really wish people would just chill out and try it and
if you like it, buy it again or not. But it's really, it's so tied to identity now that
it's kind of sick. I had a weird run in with vegans recently.
So I went to college with a bunch of, you know,
very staunch, ethical vegans.
And we were-
Are you still friends with them now?
Not like great friends, but you know-
Homies, homies, like school homies.
It was a little tough to go out to eat with them.
And the thing is I fully understand their position
and I think they're probably right.
Yeah, like, I respect their choices.
Right, living creatures deserve sovereignty
and self-determination and all that. I totally understand it.
But I think a lot of that ends up stepping on people
trying to do a little bit of good if they're not morally pure.
And this isn't me being like,
well, the vegans were mean to me,
but I had a clip where I was talking to Joseph Gordon-Levitt
on a show about the myth that
Almond milk takes more water than dairy milk. That's a myth. That's a myth
And I thought it was a really fascinating PR campaign and a vegan page
Reposted that and then I got a bunch of hate messages because people clicked into my profile and saw me holding a ham
Because I'm also a man who enjoys a ham your ham man
I'm a ham, but you're also an almond milk man too.
Well, I'm an, but people are complicated, right?
Of course.
I'm a truth guy and also I really love from a food nerd perspective.
I love food nerds, yeah.
This is an incredible product if you devoid yourself from the moralization or the environmental concerns, the emissions.
Like, this is a fascinating miracle of food that couldn't have existed 10 years ago.
Totally.
Like where do your personal motivations come in?
Is it from the food nerd, the environmental efficacy?
You know, it's hard to just take one of these things and say, oh yeah, I'm super motivated
by environment.
I think just gradually over years, and it's a super uninspiring story, but I think gradually
over years, I just wanted my way of paying rent to be more fun and give more
back to society in any way possible. And then you're etching a little bit and I can't, to what you
said, you try to be a little better and I think often the movement as it's presented doesn't
celebrate little wins. And I win.
And I can't put a blanket on that,
but I just see examples that are often so grueling.
Like, I don't know, Arnold Schwarzenegger came out saying,
if anybody tells you that you need meat to be strong,
tell them that that's not true or something like that.
And the comments are just like, he's not even vegan.
You know, it's like, destroying the man for like,
you can be multiple things.
You can, you know, I'm not vegan, but I try to eat as much plant-based as possible and
I try to champion that.
I try to make a company that makes as best possible product that you can.
And I think unless we make a very, very even better than what we
have right now, it's going to have to get even better and there's going to have to be
more of it and then slowly people are going to start adding it into their diets.
Another moment was like I was on this vegan podcast and we started discussing about the
intricacies of change and culture and so forth. And I asked them, would you be satisfied
if in 15 years, 10, 15 years,
people ate 50% plant-based and 50% animal-based,
which to me already sounds like a lofty, lofty goal,
somewhat not based in reality, but you know, maybe.
And they couldn't, they were just like, but what about the 50% of animals on the other
side?
They wouldn't be happy about it.
And it was immediately, immediately the discussion went towards the animal and it was like, man,
but you, that would be a huge win
you're you're you're thinking something you're putting something negative into
this which would be a monumental gargantuan shift for humanity like you
don't see the good in that so there's a detachment from reality in the movement
which is a probably fueled by good idealism, you know, but I wish
that it kind of went to a more realistic place where everybody could then be
involved because as soon as you start saying unrealistic things people just
don't take you seriously and so forth. So it's it's kind of hardcore.
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I have to ask you, why adding bones?
Why do you think adding bones is good?
Because I mean, a lot of the time it's kind of, did you bite the bone?
Like bite it.
It's cool, right?
It's bone adjacent.
Interesting.
Can you eat the bone?
Yeah, you can eat it.
You can eat the bone?
How does the bone taste?
You can eat anything one time.
The bone's a little tough.
It kind of is the bone, but no, like...
It's so interesting how, like, I mean, a lot of the times I've seen a lot of vegans that are like,
oh, why add like...
I used to go to this awesome vegan restaurant in LA called The Newsroom.
Very old school. And they had this incredible chicken tender that was on a stick.
And I'm like, oh, like, why are they putting on a stick?
You can use a fork and knife. And it's just the action of eating something with a bone.
So my question is, why did you guys decide
we're gonna add a bone into this?
If you have an answer for that.
I'm just curious.
Well, we just keep making stuff in our best kitchen.
And people like to play and we did very weird bone prototypes and
stuff like that.
Then you know the discussion happened right before launching the prototype one year ago
online.
We were like you know do we want to do this?
Then we made a survey and we asked people, hey, if we put out ribs,
would you like to have them with bones or not?
And we did make it clear that it's not rational
to put them in there.
Yeah, they're heavy.
I mean, it's like the weight of them,
like all sorts of packaging.
Yeah.
Yeah, it adds cost to the process.
La la la.
Yeah.
But there was two things.
Luckily, we do have a side stream of protein in our process that might otherwise go to
waste.
So we thought that we could utilize that because the bone is basically almost pure protein.
So we found a way to utilize what might have been waste into then dehydrating it into these
shapes and then making bones out of it. So in a way, it was a good move for us. And then, you know, seeing the overwhelming
vote for yes bones, like I think over 80% or even 90. Wow. We were like, all right,
I mean, yeah, another proof that people aren't rational agents. I love that.
I absolutely love the results of that survey.
And we put them out and yeah, people were like, yeah, it's fun.
You can eat it with your hands.
It kind of implies that you so we're like, yeah, of course.
I mean, you want that.
You want to nibble around the bone and that whole experience.
So we just went with it.
I don't know, you know, like a lot of decisions that we make are just like
Feels right seems alright. Let's do it. I know
I'm all about that. I'm all about yeah, let's try it dude. I love that right when you said why put bones in it
I went
And I suck the barbecue sauce off the bone not even thinking of it. Yeah, but that's why dude
It's a rib. You suck the sauce off the bone
I love hearing you speak about this plant-based meat product because you talk like a chef man
You really do you speak from a place of like love and whimsy and creativity
Whereas I think the last ten years especially it's been dominated by like environmentalism and moralism and tech bros and tech bros who were like talking about
No, that means so much to me
And I mean we you know have worked with so many chefs
in the past and there's a lot of people who were like,
every act of cooking is an act of chemistry.
And I'm like, technically that's true,
but also some of the best chefs I know can barely read
and dropped out of high school when they were 14.
But they know their craft and they know the love
of the food, right?
And I think that's what you're capturing here.
Why put the bones?
I don't know, man, It's rad. Like that's
That's an incredible thing
Life's short at the bones. I
Really like this packaging. I also think you like demystify of like vegan
Product too because a lot of the times the packaging and stuff is like scary. You know what I mean?
Yeah, it's like so tech heavy and you're just like, uh, I don't want to know about all the heme and whatnot that's going in
and the yeast going in here.
Like the packaging also makes me feel like it's so much more accessible this way.
And it's for now.
It's not for 10 years in the future, 50 years in the future.
Like this is packaging that I'm into and like I would grab
because it reminds me of stuff that's already in my pantry.
You know what I mean?
Man, did you get me on this podcast just to make me feel really really good?
We heard you were hanging out with your in-laws. So we're like, just come on and hang out with us and feel good a little bit.
But like kind of yes, cuz no like, Dennis, seriously we get sent like a lot of products.
We get sent a lot of PR email blasts for a new,
they found a new sprouted seed that you could puff and put in a package and it sold at Whole Foods for $20.
And they have all these micronutrients or whatever.
But when we read the marketing materials for Juicy Marbles,
it was the first time we'd ever seen a plant-based meat
talk about their grandmother or their mother's cooking,
which is incredible.
And it felt like a seismic shift a little bit, right?
Yeah, totally.
Because it was either-
Demystified.
The tech bro, impossible meat, big investment of the mid-2000s. Right. Over the late 90s, everything
was like, had what are they called? Mandalas? Like Dreamcatcher? The very like vegan, macrobiotic.
Oh, you're talking about the design. Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's like, you know, vaguely
Hindu symbols on the packaging and you're like,
why does my vegan hot dog?
You notice that.
You notice that.
I love that you notice that.
That was one of the reasons that I opened the plant-based restaurant.
I kid you not.
I've always been enthusiastic about the plant-based space.
And whenever something opened in my hometown, I would go immediately to check it out.
And they opened this thing, I should have known from the name.
It was something, a play on words, veg, and then a leaf for a logo.
You know, it was just screaming red flags.
And inside I was thinking, my God, why does every single place have to include mandalas?
So funny.
You know, and there was like laminated little A4 printed posters of cows.
There's a friends not food.
It was just like conversion chapel.
It wasn't a restaurant.
And that was one of a profound moment because I was like, man,
if only they marketed it as food, not as an ideology, you know?
And I think a lot of mandalas kind of come because people who care about animals so deeply
are most likely also spiritual in some sense.
And a lot of the spirituality comes from East.
And I love that shit. I love reading
Eastern philosophies. It has really changed my life. My early 20s getting all it's so I'm not
coming from a place of judgment but I do as a communicator see that a lot of people just
don't want to be you you know, they take these symbols
and they say, oh, this is for hippies. This is for that kind of people. You see
mandalas, you see cows, and all that kind of communication and you say, not for me.
And another profound moment like that was when our restaurant
also had a range of products and we were trying to get into retail. So they
organized like a tasting and their wholesale steam was there
eating our products and I'm watching these two dudes eating the pastrami that
we had with like the most glee.
You can see they're like, man, you know, like this, when you're
surprised that something is good.
And I come to them and we start chatting and the guy was like, man, I gotta tell
you, this is really, really surprisingly good, But you know, it's not for me. And I was like,
what just happened? And then I realized it's identity, you know.
That's business, baby.
Yeah, it just comes down to that. Even though he liked the taste, which in any of, if somebody,
if that was a real piece of meat,
he would be asking me,
where'd you get that?
Where can I get that?
But in this case, it was like, great,
but you know, if I bring that home,
what's the missus gonna think?
You know what I mean?
It is so bizarre because food is,
it's like damn near one of the things
that everybody has in common.
And not everybody eats for just pure nutrition
or pure face, right?
There's so much culture locked up into it.
But like, we seem to have gone too far down this rabbit hole.
Even in LA, we saw this shift from that very hippie,
you know, Eastern philosophy branded,
macrobiotic vegan restaurants.
Do you remember all the like punk junk food
vegan restaurants that opened up?
Yeah. Doomy's Home Cooking, where it was suddenly this big over correction to everything is just fried soy covered in
You know cashew cashew cream blended with yeast
Yeah, and into these big junk food platters, but I'd love that this it feels like whole
Wholesome nutritious food the label is really clean. The branding is not moralistic.
It seems like I hope we can get to a place
where we're just eating things for eating sake.
And I hope that happens, man.
I think we're on our way.
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All right, Nicole and Vladimir, we've heard what you and I have to say.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky ideas are rattling out there in the universe.
It's time for a little segment we call...
Opinions are like casserole!
Did you like our song?
I love everything that you guys are doing.
Aww.
I'm just so amazed.
I'm sorry, now her voice is pitchy right now.
Okay.
I'm... I had a lot of ribs.
I had a lot of ribs.
Alright, Vladimir, so we have asked our fans for their hottest takes about plant-based meat.
We got a couple responses. We're gonna read them out
You're gonna get first crack at responding you good with that
We'll go in order Nicole
Soy chorizo is better than the original and I will die on this hill. It's the only good meat substitute
Have you had soy chorizo or the brand name
soyrizo?
I have had soy chorizo, but I have not had this brand. I see where the sentiment is coming.
It's like these sausages with their intense salty flavor are, I guess, and I guess I'm gonna come in from a food nerd perspective but they're
easier to make because it's kind of a mince kind of thing yeah right and I feel like all
minced products are slightly easier to mimic and especially it's really once you get into the spicy
stuff with a lot of flavor,
that has been added via garlic and chili and this and that,
these are really good.
Yeah, I don't think I could even tell the difference
between anything ground beef versus vegan at this point.
And a blind test, I don't think so.
Yeah, it's like the farther you get away
from the whole muscle cut, the easier it is to reproduce because you're adding so many things.
I especially, you're probably scrambling it with eggs as well,
or some sort of, you know, vegan egg if that's your jam.
You talked about like meat eaters not being a monolith,
and I was thinking about my brother who, he's four years older,
but we have the same genes, and so, you know,
he's got high cholesterol because it runs in our family.
So he stopped eating red meat. I've started to phase out red meat at home, and so he's somebody that you know
Yeah, he'll just use soy riso or he'll you know eat beyond burgers impossible burgers whatever because we're trying to not die at 55
Okay, well these are my thoughts on soy chorizo, so my husband cannot
Digest it like it makes like it gives him the worst
farts ever. So our house is a is a not soy chorizo house anymore after like trying it
twice. So we're just regular chorizo people. What is it? Beef chorizo though right? Yeah.
We don't eat pork in the house. But yeah beef beef chorizo, if we eat chorizo, at all.
So I don't care either way, but my household is just, it's a no chorizo zone, if you want
to know the truth.
We're just not chorizo people.
My stomach has never been so destroyed as when I, I've dabbled going vegan or fully plant
based for like a month or two at a time.
I have too.
And I'm sure you have too, yeah.
It was seitan.
It was the pure wheat gluten. And I'm sure you have to. It was seitan. It was the pure wheat gluten.
And I think I am hyper gluten tolerant.
Like I run through bread.
But I ate so much seitan that I remember just getting the craziest bubble guts, man.
Yeah, it was horrible.
Oof. Oof. Yes.
Just when I heard what seitan is, I could never get behind that.
Like just conceptually.
But I don't think I've even had good one.
Maybe I just wasn't lucky in that sense,
but oh my, it's pure gluten.
That's just, it's almost nothing else there.
It's like a rubber ball.
It's good.
It's fun.
Okay, yeah, we'll give it the bounce.
It has the bounce.
Should I read the next one?
Yeah, do it.
Shane says, it's probably the long-term answer for the human race, but needs to become near
indistinguishable to meat in a blind taste test before the leap can be made.
They're talking about the singularity.
It's like a touring test.
The meat singularity.
I don't know.
I don't know about that. I can't think about what was the first
part like about saving the world or saving the human race? It's probably the long-term answer
for the human race. I don't know if I can dabble in these grandiose concepts, what is the answer for the human race? I mean, I still
thought it was 42. Reference. From Hitchhiker's Guide. Shout out Douglas Adams. Yeah, I don't
know, man. I do think he's right in the sense that plant-based meats are going to have to get
much, much, much better. But as we talked earlier-based meats are going to have to get much, much, much better.
But as we talked earlier, we're also going to have to make some chill moves in terms
of culture and how we talk about food.
I don't know how to describe it differently.
On a political and social scale, we're going to have to get way more chill.
That is the perfect way to do it.
Yeah, that's way to do it.
Yeah, that's how I see it.
But he is right.
Yeah, dude.
What's the answer for the human race?
It's like, how long are we going to last before AI reaches?
Our robot overlaps?
I have no idea, man.
I don't know what the answer is.
All I know is like to do one good thing is better than to do zero good things.
And eating plants seems to be more environmentally efficacious than like,
you just like, whatever, man.
Um, I don't know.
I'm in my post ethical bimbo era, you know that.
And so, uh, for me, I just, I cared about, I used to be like an environmental
journalist and these are still things that I generally believe in, right?
But also I realized that whenever I wrote about them,
people would just get pissed off,
and it would create infighting with groups
that already believed whatever they were going to believe.
And so I could write about the most environmentally ethical
pig farm in the world,
and then the vegans were going to get pissed off,
and then the hardcore industrial farmers
were going to get pissed off,
and then everybody was fighting.
So at this point, it's just like,
I don't know what the answer is.
Do I think it needs to be
perfectly indistinguishable from meat?
I think it could help,
but I don't know that we're ever going to get there
because nature is as it is,
and there are certain intricacies to meat
that I don't think could ever be replicated.
I would add to that,
I don't think it has to get exactly one for one.
You know, I think it just has to become really, really good, better than it is now on a whole
scale.
Yeah.
But, you know, just like pork is not the same as beef and it's not the same as chicken
and so forth, you know, like you can't expect soy or pea or whatever the protein base is
to give you exactly that. But I don't think it has to. But there is a problem because we
do compare it to the originator. Right? So as soon as you compare it, and then it's not
exactly like it, you see is as lesser, most likely. But I think it doesn't have to become
identical, but it has to become better
And I agree then are all of our problems worldwide will be solved finally
That's why we that's why we started juicy marbles to solve all human problems
By our plant-based stakes in ribs
Why make the bones Nicole to solve all the world's problems? I'm telling you, it's all about the bones.
I don't...
My problem is I don't think about this stuff enough to have an answer.
My opinion is I just don't think about the human race in that large context.
I don't think I've like gained, I don't know, like awareness.
I'm 31 and I just don't...
I'm 31, I'm married, I like avocados, I do a podcast and
I don't know crap about the human race and how it works it, but I'm glad that maybe this podcast
and maybe some you know plant-based meat can make people happier and that's where I stand.
Here she comes, Miss America! Like such as. Nicole, that's's I wish more people
Just spoke like you did right now and say I don't know the big answers to the human race because if you go online
You'll just see people ultimately what you gotta do to save the world. No, I'll tell you what I do
You know, it's like everybody seems to know the answer to all the human problems
And I just I find it very refreshing when somebody says, I don't know.
Yeah, that's me.
Like 90% of the time.
I don't know.
Especially a podcast host.
I don't know.
Same.
Take the next one, Josh.
All right, this is fun.
Plant-based buffalo nuggets are indistinguishable
from real chicken nuggets to me.
If the option's there, I'll get them
because the more texture, since ground-up chicken
doesn't taste like chicken anyways.
Plant-based buffalo wings are just...
What is that?
So it's like a ground-up, like, boneless wings.
Like a ground-up chicken nugget
that are then fried and coated in hot sauce.
So they're saying the vegan version of that
is indistinguishable.
Yeah, that's what I said earlier,
with the burgers and the chorizo,
it's one of those foods which is already
a processed, ground down,
far from the original version kind of thing
with a lot of spices and then the buffalo has also this sticky sauce over it right yeah that's the one yeah yeah
so yeah man you know chicken nuggets even before veganism were always kind of
like scrutinizing we you know one of the first you know one of the first viral
videos from the food industry was like how nuggets are made and everyone was like wow
Oh, yeah, I remember that. It looked like taffy. So yeah, I mean they are undistinguishable
I don't think I you know, I don't even know what chicken nuggets taste like. Yeah, they don't
It's a weird food Vladimir. I think you're lying. You can totally tell the difference
Can you? Yes
What do you mean? A soy nugget versus a chicken nugget?
Yes, you can absolutely tell the difference. I don't care how much sauce, how much X, Y
and Z you put on it. Chicken tastes like chicken. It just does. We gotta put your money where
your mouth is. We gotta see. What do you mean? It's obvious. You're right, Nicole. I think
you're right. I mean, the thing is I never had like a blind test
But my assumption is I have tried I have tried very very good and convincing vegan chicken tindles
I'm just gonna shout out to Tindle. Like I really love what they did. I had a chance to try it once and I
Don't know man. Yeah yeah chicken tastes like chicken but you know
so does beef but then you add ketchup and mayo and this and that and I maybe I would assume that
it's super hard to tell but yeah you know I can tell I'm gonna challenge the assumption that
chicken tastes like chicken. Here's why.
No, no, hear me out, hear me out, hear me out.
As plant-based meats get better over time,
meat-based meats are getting worse.
Our chicken is getting so, okay, so-
Or maybe it's just staying the same?
No, it's not.
Have you ever had like an heirloom breed of chicken?
Not for a long time.
I had a chicken that was raised for four years
in somebody's backyard.
Wow.
And it tasted...
Did it go to grad school?
Shut up, dude.
It tasted ten times more like chicken than a chicken breast you would get at the grocery store.
Okay, fair.
Chicken is tasting less like chicken over the years because they are prioritizing the
growth in the breasts and now these birds can't even move to get blood flow through
the muscles so chicken breast doesn't taste like anything anymore.
Not only that, what is it called? Like woody tissue syndrome?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the woody chicken.
Do you know about woody tissue syndrome?
It's something like...
So chicken boobies get so big that the muscle str...
Tell me if I'm wrong. The muscles basically outgrow
and then it creates these striations
where the chicken is basically solid, woody and gross.
How many times have you bought chicken breast from the store
and then tasted it and had to throw it away
because it has this disease that we can't track?
Like seven, eight times at this point.
It sucks.
Like chicken's literally getting worse over time
and it's cheaper, it's easier to produce,
beef's getting more expensive, yada yada.
And so like, again, the singularity, we're gonna cross,
the axes on the graph are gonna cross at some point
and it crosses in buffalo nuggets
Yeah, but that's the thing, you know, I think I think that's what industry does like it also they took chicken an amazing thing and ruined it
Ultimately, I think it's just you can't have an animal based system that feeds all people
But to your point, I don't think nuggets are like,
they don't have chicken properties really because it's super ground, right?
Like what kind of nuggets are we talking about? Are we talking about that McDonald's
thing or are we talking about pieces of chicken that are fried in batter?
Because that maybe, you're right, that would be harder to copy because I'm
talking about the ground stuff.
I think also the texture of chicken, the texture of chicken I think adds a lot of the sensorial
property of chicken I guess.
I mean whenever I eat the ground stuff, it tastes like chicken to me.
Maybe I just need to do, I need to just do a blind taste test, put this all to rest,
Vladimir come on the show, hang out with us,
we can all eat it and then we can really determine it.
How about that?
Yes, yep.
We need to get to the bottom of this.
We got it.
You said you could taste the difference
between Coke and Pepsi and you were lying
when we did a ground test.
I wasn't lying, I was overconfident.
There's a difference between lying and being overconfident.
On that note, thank you so much
for listening to A Hot dog is a sandwich.
We got new audio episodes every Wednesday
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Vladimir, you got anything else to share?
No, nothing.
More chill, man.
Bring more chill. More chill, man. Bring more chill.
So chill.
Last podcast they asked me that and I said, you know, next time I'm going to say I had nothing to share. Absolutely nothing.
No. You shared it all. You shared enough of us. But I do really appreciate you, man.
You're rad, incredible product. We weren't just blowing so much.
Yeah, thanks for coming on.