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A RECIPE FOR THE FUTURE: The Surprising World of Corporate ‘Meat Reduction’ Strategies

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It would be hard to imagine just a few years ago that large corporations would even be discussing meat demand reduction or plant-based eating as a significant contributor to their climate strategies.

SAMI GROVER: The website Epicurious recently made a bold and somewhat surprising announcement: The Condé Nast-owned cooking platform is going to stop publishing any new recipes featuring beef. This is, Epicurious admitted, not a silver bullet. It also acknowledged some readers wouldn’t be happy. But in a move that was no doubt intended to pre-empt the inevitable pro-beef backlash, the site pointed out the shift actually happened some time ago.

The editors at Epicurious explained: “In a food system so broken, almost no choice is perfect. And yet we know that home cooks want to do better. We know because we actually pulled the plug on beef well over a year ago, and our readers have rallied around the recipes we published in beef’s place. For every burger recipe we didn’t publish, we put a vegetarian recipe into the world instead.

The reason for the move was pretty simple… While environmentalism has long been associated with vegetarianism and/or veganism, when it comes to climate impacts specifically, a majority of the benefits of these diets can be achieved simply by cutting out red meat… Not everyone — even on the pro-climate side — is happy with Epicurious. Plenty of people on Twitter argued that grass-fed beef may be possible to raise entirely sustainably, especially if we can tackle methane emissions…

Here’s the thing though: Even if Epicurious included stipulations about using grass-fed or sustainably raised beef and even if that beef can be raised in some quantities entirely sustainably, it seems fair to suggest that many readers would simply use whatever beef was available to them for a recipe. By literally eliminating beef from its recipes, Epicurious has recognized its role as a driver of demand.

It has also opened itself up to exploring different avenues. Rather than simply educating folks on the impacts of different foods, and then hoping they take the more sustainable option, the site has chosen to direct readers to plant-centered recipes…

This is another example of a growing trend of institutional reducetarianism, where businesses and institutions are taking steps to cut back on the amount of meat associated with their operations. From Ikea’s plant-based meatballs to Sonic’s part beef, part mushroom burger, this trend has taken many forms…

These are interesting times. It would be hard to imagine just a few years ago that large corporations would even be discussing demand reduction or plant-based eating as a significant contributor to their climate strategies. And yet the situation we are in as a society really leaves few other options. The question now, of course, is: What happens next?… Let’s just see if those changes translate to a reduction in overall consumption. SOURCE…

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