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BK Impossible Whopper....

@Doctor Bombay , are you intending that this thread become a larger discussion around plant-based meat substitutes? Because if it is just intended to be an update on what you had for lunch, I'm going to move it to the "Random Thoughts" thread.
 
:thumbsup:

I find the idea of a vegan Whopper to be rather amusing. Who goes to places like BK for their health, anyway? :lol:

Actually, it's a vegetarian Whopper, since it has regular cheese on it. ;)

With 5% of Americans espousing a vegetarian diet of some sort now, it's good to see the chains switching over to something healthier.

ETA: a woman I went to school with developed an allergy to red meat a few years ago from a tick bite, and she's really enjoying the Impossible Whopper!
 
It's not dinner unless something died for it.

That's true even for Vegans. Insects die due to farming.

Ironically, the best way to feed yourself is to take up bow-hunting, and eat venison.

If you eat the cow--or eat like the cow--either you burp the methane or the cow does. Lots of Bison or cows--it's all about the same.

But you need a lot of crop or pasture land one way or the other.

With deer meat, you aren't chopping anything down--or digging anything up.

The worst implement we ever used against Mother Earth was not the drill bit--but the plow.
 
Actually, it's a vegetarian Whopper, since it has regular cheese on it. ;)

Also the patty is cooked on the same grill as regular burgers and chicken patties, so it picks up trace amounts of meat juices or whatever that way.


Why do you assume it's something to do with your health ?

The Impossible Burger isn't really significantly healthier than a beef burger:

https://thetakeout.com/review-burger-king-impossible-whopper-1837069411
For those wondering how it compares in nutrition: The Impossible Whopper is only 30 calories and six grams of fat less than the standard Whopper, and 100 mg more sodium.

The benefit of eating vegetarian (aside from ethical reasons) is more about the planet's health and the economy's health, because livestock agriculture is terrible for the environment and very resource-intensive. The more people cut back on meat-eating, the more global warming would be slowed.


I've been curious about the Impossible Burger, but I'm not sure it's something I need to have. I've been eating veggie burgers so long that I've pretty much lost my taste for ground beef anyway. Making veggie burgers taste like beef is more for the benefit of people who haven't already retrained their palates for vegetarian foods.
 
The Impossible Burger isn't really significantly healthier than a beef burger /QUOTE]
Exactly. It's got nothing at all to do with health.

It has got a lot to do with not killing animals and something to do with reducing environment impact.

I've been curious about the Impossible Burger, but I'm not sure it's something I need to have. I've been eating veggie burgers so long that I've pretty much lost my taste for ground beef anyway. Making veggie burgers taste like beef is more for the benefit of people who haven't already retrained their palates for vegetarian foods.

Oh I don't know. I gave up meat in 1985 and I'm loving the new plant based meat substitutes that are springing up.
 
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:techman:

I find the idea of a vegan Whopper to be rather amusing. Who goes to places like BK for their health, anyway? :lol:
Well sometimes a group of friends wants to go somewhere to eat.
If you are vegitarian sometimes it's nice not to have to get just a salad. Most veggie burgers are more filling that a salad.
 
Also, fast-food salads often have meat in them and you have to be careful not to order the wrong one. I once accidentally ordered one that turned out to have bacon in it.
Or there are apples and cranberries (cheap)
I didn't order a fruit salad. :ack:
Where are the zucchini and celery and mushrooms and bell peppers?:biggrin:

But I thought that BK always had a veggie burger?
I love it when I tell people I'm vegitarian and they tell me to "have the chicken".
 
We truly live in the future, if now vegans can clog their arteries with junk food just as well as meat eaters.

I’m not vegan but if I ever tried to be I think I’d gorge on primavera pasta.
 
To me, "Vegan" will always mean someone from a planet orbiting Alpha Lyrae. I find it such a weird coinage for people who think "vegetarian" isn't vegetarian enough. It's even weirder that two of the three letters "vegan" shares with "vegetable" aren't even pronounced the same way.
 
I've had the Impossible Whopper (tried out of sheer curiosity) and the Beyond Burger (friend took me out to lunch and she's vegetarian, so I didn't want to make her pay for meat).

Overall, I thought the Beyond burger was pretty bad. It had an overwhelmingly bad odor (smelled like ... boiled peas) and the flavor was nowhere near actual beef. Very, very dry, too. I'd never have one again.

The Impossible Whopper was ... something. It smelled like a beef burger, it looked like a beef burger, and for the most part, it tasted like a beef burger (I'm guessing the high sodium content has something to do with it). But again, the texture was off, almost crumbly. But it wasn't a waste of four bucks, I suppose. Not something I'd ever go out of my way for, either.

That being said, I'm glad for the surge of improvements in plant-based meat substitutes. Our meat consumption, not just as a country but across the entire world, is entirely unsustainable and is one of the biggest contributors to climate change. The technology will only get better as time goes by.
 
Also the patty is cooked on the same grill as regular burgers and chicken patties, so it picks up trace amounts of meat juices or whatever that way.

Probably the only reason it's palatable ;)

I'll stick with the beef, thanks :techman:

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