Archive for the ‘food’ category: Page 279
Aug 17, 2017
Scientists Have Developed a New Method to 3D-Print Living Tissue
Posted by John Gallagher in categories: 3D printing, bioprinting, biotech/medical, food, habitats
https://youtube.com/watch?v=-5jcq3RlxJQ
Cell by Cell
3D-printing technology has made significant strides over the past several years. What started as a tool for producing small objects can now be used to craft food, build houses, and even construct “space fabric.”
Continue reading “Scientists Have Developed a New Method to 3D-Print Living Tissue” »
Aug 15, 2017
This Molecule Found in Royal Jelly Is The Secret Ingredient to Speed Up Wound Healing
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: biotech/medical, food
Honey bees really are tiny hardworking superheroes of the insect world — not only do they keep our agriculture going by pollinating many of our crops, but they also produce a myriad of beneficial substances, like honey and beeswax.
For thousands of years honey has been prized for its topical antiseptic properties. But now researchers have discovered that its lesser-known cousin, royal jelly, has special molecules that speed up wound healing.
Royal jelly is the superfood worker bees secrete and feed all their larvae, especially the queen bees. While queens are developing, they basically float in a pool of this stuff, and humans have figured out how to stimulate queen larva production to then harvest the royal jelly.
Aug 15, 2017
Amazon looks to new food technology for home delivery
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: business, food, habitats, military
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) — Amazon.com Inc is exploring a technology first developed for the U.S. military to produce tasty prepared meals that do not need refrigeration, as it looks for new ways to muscle into the $700 billion U.S. grocery business.
The world’s biggest online retailer has discussed selling ready-to-eat dishes such as beef stew and a vegetable frittata as soon as next year, officials at the startup firm marketing the technology told Reuters.
The dishes would be easy to stockpile and ship because they do not require refrigeration and could be offered quite cheaply compared with take-out from a restaurant.
Aug 15, 2017
Future of Food | San Francisco Chronicle
Posted by Odette Bohr Dienel in categories: food, futurism
“Tracing the next generation of farms, restaurants and kitchens in the Bay Area and beyond”
Aug 14, 2017
This Economic Model Organized Asia for Decades. Now It’s Broken
Posted by Derick Lee in categories: economics, employment, food, robotics/AI, sustainability
Pan’s company is at the vanguard of a trend that could have devastating consequences for Asia’s poorest nations. Low-cost manufacturing of clothes, shoes, and the like was the first rung on the economic ladder that Japan, South Korea, China, and other countries used to climb out of poverty after World War II. For decades that process followed a familiar pattern: As the economies of the early movers shifted into more sophisticated industries such as electronics, poorer countries took their place in textiles, offering the cheap labor that low-tech factories traditionally required. Manufacturers got inexpensive goods to ship to Walmarts and Tescos around the world, and poor countries were able to provide mass industrial employment for the first time, giving citizens an alternative to toiling on farms.
Automation threatens to block the ascent of Asia’s poor. Civil unrest could follow.
Aug 13, 2017
NASA ‘Cribs’: Tour an Astronaut Habitat for Mock Space Missions (Video)
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: food, habitats, space
Ever wonder how astronauts will live on other worlds? Welcome to the Human Exploration Research Analog, or HERA, a habitat at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston built to simulate the isolation of missions to deep space. You can take a tour of the HERA habitat with NASA interns in this new video in the style of the MTV series “Cribs.”
“HERA is a unique three-story habitat designed to serve as an analog for isolation, confinement, and remote conditions in exploration scenarios,” NASA officials explained in a video description. “This video gives a tour of where crew members live, work, sleep, and eat during the analog missions.”
Continue reading “NASA ‘Cribs’: Tour an Astronaut Habitat for Mock Space Missions (Video)” »
Aug 10, 2017
Salmon becomes world’s first genetically-modified animal to enter food supply
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: food, genetics
Canadian consumers won’t know if they are buying a fish engineered to grow twice as fast on less food.
Aug 9, 2017
When is the correct time to eat a banana: green or yellow?
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: food
When you eat something loaded with sugar, your taste buds, your gut and your brain all take notice. This activation of your reward system is not unlike how bodies process addictive substances such as alcohol or nicotine — an overload of sugar spikes dopamine levels and leaves you craving more.
With this video prepared by TED-Ed, Nicole Avena explains why sweets and treats should be enjoyed in moderation.