Bill Gates-Funded Startup Hampton Creek Foods Aims To Replace Eggs
SAN FRANCISCO — The
startup is housed in a garage-like space in San Francisco's tech-heavy South of
Market neighborhood, but it isn't like most of its neighbors that develop software,
websites and mobile-phone apps. Its mission is to find plant replacements for
eggs.
Inside, research
chefs bake cookies and cakes, whip up batches of flavored mayonnaise and
pan-fry omelets and French toast — all without eggs.
Funded by prominent
Silicon Valley investors and Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Hampton Creek Foods
seeks to disrupt a global egg industry that backers say wastes energy, pollutes
the environment, causes disease outbreaks and confines chickens to tiny spaces.
The company, which just
started selling its first product — Just Mayo mayonnaise — at Whole Foods
Markets, is part of a new generation of so-called food-tech ventures that aim
to change the way we eat.
"There's
nothing to indicate that this will be a trend that will end anytime soon,"
said Anand Sanwal, CEO of CB Insights, a New York firm that tracks venture
capital investment. "Sustainability and challenges to the food supply are
pretty fundamental issues."
Venture capital
firms, which invest heavily in early-stage technology companies, poured nearly
$350 million into food-related startups last year, compared with less than $50
million in 2008, according to the firm.
Plant-based
alternatives to eggs, poultry and other meat could be good for the environment
because it could reduce consumption of meat, which requires large amounts of
land, water and crops to produce, backers say.
It could also benefit people's health, especially in heavy meat-eating countries like the U.S., and reduce outbreaks of diseases such as avian flu, they say.
"The biggest
challenge is that people who consume a lot of meat really like meat, and to
convince them to try something different may be extremely difficult," said
Claire Kremen, faculty co-director of the Berkeley Food Institute at the
University of California, Berkeley.
The American Egg
Board, which represents U.S. producers, said eggs can't be replaced.
"Our customers
have said they're not interested in egg substitutes. They want real, natural
eggs with their familiar ingredients," Mitch Kanter, executive director of
the board-funded Egg Nutrition Center, said in a statement.
The industry has
reduced its water use and greenhouse gas emissions, and hens are living longer
due to better health and nutrition, he said.
Hampton Creek's
quest to replace the ubiquitous chicken egg is also backed by PayPay co-founder
Peter Thiel and Khosla Ventures, a venture capital fund started by Sun
Microsystems co-founder Vinod Khosla.
In its food lab,
biochemists grind up beans and peer through microscopes to study their
molecular structure, looking for plants that can fulfill the culinary functions
of eggs. So far, the company has analyzed some 1,500 types of plants from more
than 60 countries.
The research has
resulted in 11 "hits," said Josh Tetrick, the company's CEO.
"Our approach
is to use plants that are much more sustainable — less greenhouse gas
emissions, less water, no animal involved and a whole lot more affordable — to
create a better food system," said the former linebacker on West Virginia
University's football team.
The company's first
product — the mayonnaise — is sold for roughly the same price as the traditional
variety. It soon hopes to start selling cookie dough and a batter that
scrambles like eggs when fried in a pan.
"The egg is a
miracle, so one of the hardest parts of replacing it is all the functions that
it can do," said Chris Jones, the company's culinary director of
innovations and a former contestant on Bravo TV's Top Chef.
While Hampton Creek
takes aim at the egg, another Gates-backed company is targeting the chicken
itself.

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