IKEA Set To Create The Fast Food Of The Future With Insects, Algae, And Mealworms
We may love IKEA almost as much as we love Costco; and just like with the big box store, we find that many people just come to the giant retailer to eat IKEA-specific foods like Swedish meatballs and lingonberries. IKEA, realizing that 30 percent of its customers are also its food fans, has been playing up its culinary efforts with pop-up restaurants and stand-alone cafes. And obviously, the retailer is completely stocked for such efforts with massive quantities of kitchen-related supplies.
Now Forbes reports today that IKEA is taking its food innovation even further... into the world of the future! Turns out IKEA has a lab in Copenhagen called Space10, which, according to its website, aims "to enable a better, more meaningful and sustainable life for the many people. We are on a mission to explore and design new ways of living."
Ikea is developing the fast food of the future, from it's Space10 lab in Copenhagen. The Dogless Hotdog has a... https://t.co/IKjVMuXQNf
— Robert Henrikson (@roberthenrikson) March 13, 2018
Space10 appears to be the place where these ambitious and creative food ideas can be realized. Ideas like "hot dogs that are completely vegetarian, down to the micro-algae bun; a crispy burger made from bugs; and two varieties of 'meatballs,' one derived from worms, and the other from vegetables." A few years ago, Forbes points out, IKEA introduced "Tomorrow's Meatball — a visual rethinking of IKEA's iconic meatball using alternative ingredients such as insects, algae, and lab-grown meat."
Ikea Space10 Lab Announces "Fast Food of the Future" Including Algae Hot Dogs and Mealworm Burgers https://t.co/qZUXUshse5 pic.twitter.com/EBsetHjEPt
— Sathya Narayanan (@sathutweety) March 13, 2018
If anyone can sell this experimental future food, it would definitely IKEA; we're just picturing marketing campaigns in pristine, white 2024 kitchens with all the latest spatulas and cabinetry. As long as there's no complicated assembly required, eaters of the future looking for unconventional proteins should be all for it.