About a month ago, I heard about Impossible foods and the burger they were trying out at local Burger Kings. Well, select BKs, only in the STL area.
I was late to the party because plenty of other restaurants had been serving Impossible's offerings for quite some time.
I'm not vegan but I do go vegetarian a day or two a week, which is really just me eating less food lol. But I wanted to try it because during these days that I go veg, I find that I could stay that way for a few days at a time by eating things that may have similar texture as meat. While it's certainly not a meat-substitute, I do find that Indian dishes where paneer is substituted for chicken or lamb, I can easily eat that dish because the curry is still the same as the non-veg variant of the dish. And that's where all the flavor is anyway, not necessarily the meat. My parents love Boca burgers and I'd occasionally eat one with them, still, not as a meat-substitute, but I liked the taste. Recently we switched brands to Dr Praeger's veggie burger and that is even better.
Anyway, BK started offering the Impossible Whopper, I thought it was available everywhere, but it wasn't. Being turned away from the local BK like I was a lunatic insisting on an "Impossible" Burger instead of the usual veggie burger they offered, I found the restaurants near me that did serve their products.
White Castle.
So I went about two weeks ago to the White Castle and got two of their Impossible Sliders. I love White Castler sliders, by the way. Sliders are mean to be tiny but I just love the texture of the meat and onions and all that shit. I used to eat ten of them when I was a fat ass. I'm still a fat ass, but I feel like shit after 5 of them. Progress.
I tried WC's Impossible slider and it was surprisingly good. Again, I prefer the beef patty over it, but Impossible Foods has done a great job in getting the texture to be edible and not taste synthetic. Not quite the texture of a beef patty, but still more than palatable and decently flavored.
Looks like BK is expanding the offering nationwide by the end of 2019: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...for-small-restaurants/?utm_term=.2ef7124c270b
The craze is picking up that there's even a shortage of it: https://www.eater.com/2019/4/29/185...impossible-foods-expansion-restaurants-demand
I don't know if I'll ever give up meat and I'd still prefer paneer or even tofu to the Impossible Burger, but they're getting there. It's not a bad burger and it doesn't taste fake and synthetic. I know, ground beef is not "natural" either but they do a good job of helping you get over that with all the preservatives and chemicals they treat it with. It doesn't seem this Impossible meat needs that treatment and I think it tastes just fine.
I'd recommend getting a taste of it if a restaurant near you serves it. I don't know if it's widely available overseas yet but I expect it will be. Dave and Busters, Red Robin, White Castle, and certain BK locations have the "meat" available. Some smaller restaurants that aren't chains near me also offer it; you can always just search the Impossible Foods website for locations serving it.
I was late to the party because plenty of other restaurants had been serving Impossible's offerings for quite some time.
I'm not vegan but I do go vegetarian a day or two a week, which is really just me eating less food lol. But I wanted to try it because during these days that I go veg, I find that I could stay that way for a few days at a time by eating things that may have similar texture as meat. While it's certainly not a meat-substitute, I do find that Indian dishes where paneer is substituted for chicken or lamb, I can easily eat that dish because the curry is still the same as the non-veg variant of the dish. And that's where all the flavor is anyway, not necessarily the meat. My parents love Boca burgers and I'd occasionally eat one with them, still, not as a meat-substitute, but I liked the taste. Recently we switched brands to Dr Praeger's veggie burger and that is even better.
Anyway, BK started offering the Impossible Whopper, I thought it was available everywhere, but it wasn't. Being turned away from the local BK like I was a lunatic insisting on an "Impossible" Burger instead of the usual veggie burger they offered, I found the restaurants near me that did serve their products.
White Castle.
So I went about two weeks ago to the White Castle and got two of their Impossible Sliders. I love White Castler sliders, by the way. Sliders are mean to be tiny but I just love the texture of the meat and onions and all that shit. I used to eat ten of them when I was a fat ass. I'm still a fat ass, but I feel like shit after 5 of them. Progress.
I tried WC's Impossible slider and it was surprisingly good. Again, I prefer the beef patty over it, but Impossible Foods has done a great job in getting the texture to be edible and not taste synthetic. Not quite the texture of a beef patty, but still more than palatable and decently flavored.
Looks like BK is expanding the offering nationwide by the end of 2019: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...for-small-restaurants/?utm_term=.2ef7124c270b
The craze is picking up that there's even a shortage of it: https://www.eater.com/2019/4/29/185...impossible-foods-expansion-restaurants-demand
I don't know if I'll ever give up meat and I'd still prefer paneer or even tofu to the Impossible Burger, but they're getting there. It's not a bad burger and it doesn't taste fake and synthetic. I know, ground beef is not "natural" either but they do a good job of helping you get over that with all the preservatives and chemicals they treat it with. It doesn't seem this Impossible meat needs that treatment and I think it tastes just fine.
I'd recommend getting a taste of it if a restaurant near you serves it. I don't know if it's widely available overseas yet but I expect it will be. Dave and Busters, Red Robin, White Castle, and certain BK locations have the "meat" available. Some smaller restaurants that aren't chains near me also offer it; you can always just search the Impossible Foods website for locations serving it.