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Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habits?

Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

Ice cream. Just ice cream.

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Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

I think the colored cubes are very Star Trek-y, seeing as how they came out of the first TV show to have the name "Star Trek." They are certainly exotic and futuristic, and barely recognizable to 20th/21st-century humans as foodstuffs. That's the kind of thing I would like to see more of. I miss that aspect of Trek, showing that the aspects of everyday life that we take for granted are different from what we know.

Perhaps I should rephrase that. It's not very Star Trek-y (or rather, in-continuity) if Series Seven was to be set at almost any point beside the 2260s. We've seen what they eat in the TNG era, the Enterprise era, the classic Movies era, and the Abramsverse era. And it's pretty much what we eat now. It's almost to the point that the colored cubes of TOS would have to have been a fad or we should just squint and assume they were actually eating turkey in those scenes.

Don't get me wrong, I do like the colored cubes. But they would perhaps be best only if the new series was going for a retrofuturistic, 1960s-vibe (which would be awesome, but perhaps not profitable, unfortunately).

TNG introduced us to the idea that everything they eat is replicated from base matter, and they're all just vegetarians basically ("We don't enslave animals"). It's why I really didn't have an issue with Chakotay eating roast beef and whatnot. Enterprise, and therefore TOS, had the same idea with their protein resequencers (although, I like to imagine that was a ship-based necessity unavailable to the majority of 2150s Earth).
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

TNG introduced us to the idea that everything they eat is replicated from base matter, and they're all just vegetarians basically ("We don't enslave animals")
I wouldn't think the term "vegetarians" would apply. Just as eating replicated meat would not make you a carnivore. Similarly, eating replicated vegetables would not make you a vegetarian.

In one scene we saw some of the TNG officers sit down to a meal of real eggs, Picard maintains a supply of real caviar (again with the eggs), so they are apparently not opposed to consuming non-replicated meat.

Omnivores.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

In "Sins of the Father," Picard claimed that replicated caviar was not as good as the real thing. If it is truly an accurate replication down to the molecular level, there shouldn't be any discernible difference in flavor, texture, etc. So maybe the replicators don't work as well as they seem to.

The decision in that same episode to serve roasted poultry to Kurn as a representation of typical Earth cuisine, along with Geordi's comment that "we cook many of our foods," seems to indicate a particular monolithic turn in Earth gastronomic culture in the future. There are plenty of uncooked fish and meat dishes in various Earth cuisines that probably would have been more palatable to a Klingon than the "burned replicated bird meat" that they served.

On the subject of eggs, Kirk was OK with preparing real (imaginary?) Ktarian eggs in the Nexus in Star Trek: Generations. In the contemporary world, there are different levels of vegetarianism, and eggs are acceptable in some of them.

So I'm not sure if vegetarianism is a philosophical standard in the Federation. Jadzia Dax was OK eating the disgusting rodent thing that Kor killed in "The Sword of Kahless."

Kor
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

Mmmmm I love me some Horta eggs. :drool: Enough yoke in them sucka's to cover a whole stack of flapjacks.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

The human digestive system hasn't evolved to subsist comfortably on an entirely liquid diet or ...
Depends on what you mean by "liquid." My aunt has been on a liquid feeding tube for over two years, while initially a medical necessity, my aunt says she prefers it because it's easier to digest than solid food.

Has the consistency (and appearance) of thin turkey gravy.


I'm sure she's the picture of health, physically and mentally.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

As part of my fitness routine, I consume a lot of blended protein shakes which include eggs, protein powder, fruit, oats, wheat germ, etc. They end up as thick liquids with the consistency of a milkshake. Sometimes I even use that as a meal substitute. I would consider myself in decent health.

But I guess that's technically an emulsion of solids in a liquid, rather than true liquid. :confused:

Kor
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

I'm sure she's the picture of health, physically and mentally.
Mentally yes, physically unfortunately not. But she is a woman in her eighties.

If it is truly an accurate replication down to the molecular level, there shouldn't be any discernible difference in flavor, texture, etc. So maybe the replicators don't work as well as they seem to.
My take is that the replicators aren't "down to the molecular level" which is why they can't make some medicines and apparently can't make living internal organs.

The inability to make Picard a replacement heart could indicate that a replicator is incapable of producing individual DNA strands.

I'm not sure where the "down to the molecular level" come from, to the best of my recall it was never directly said on any of the shows.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

As part of my fitness routine, I consume a lot of blended protein shakes which include eggs, protein powder, fruit, oats, wheat germ, etc. They end up as thick liquids with the consistency of a milkshake. Sometimes I even use that as a meal substitute. I would consider myself in decent health.

But I guess that's technically an emulsion of solids in a liquid, rather than true liquid. :confused:

Kor

You're missing it.

Do you live on only that for years?
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

It's basically solid food put in a blender (not exactly the stuff that hospitals use in feeding tubes), so I think it would be doable. :shrug:

Anyway, I guess the matter of replicator accuracy was more of an assumption, especially based on the notion that it was somehow related to transporter technology.

Kor
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

I could see a scene play out where a crew member from some southeast Asian tribe talks about eating their dead and its ritual importance. Then the other crewman responding with fascination rather than disgust. As far as (ethical) cannibalism goes I think that might be the closest we get considering the intended audience.

It would be nice to see more consumption of insects. I think that out of all the potential candidates for foods-we-consider-strange-now-but-wont-be-in-the-future insects are at the top of the list.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

^ A health foods store in my town sells cricket flour. It's quite expensive, though. :(

Kor
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

There should be a Starfleet officer who comes from a species that only consumes a liquid diet.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

My take is that, at least in the TNG era, replicators make food that is completely indistinguishable from the real thing. Picard and Scotty and others are just antiquarian enough to believe that there is something different about them. But if you were to blindfold them for a taste test, they wouldn't be able to tell the difference.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

But if you were to blindfold them for a taste test, they wouldn't be able to tell the difference
Except Scotty didn't know he was consuming something replicated, it was in fact a blind taste test.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

Well, when he was served the synthehol version of Scotch, he could quickly tell that it wasn't the real thing. "Laddy, this is not Scotch!"

Kor
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

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You just know that Bones would want it dirty.
 
Re: Should the new Trek series depict radically different dietary habi

It'd be pretty cool to see the crew stop by San Francisco and get some cheeseburgers.
 
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