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Generally, ''meat analogue'' is understood to mean a food made from non-meats, sometimes without dairy products. The market for meat-less foods includes health-conscious non-vegetarians, persons following rules of Kashrut , or to address ethical and nutritional issues for Vegetarians and Vegans . An example of this type of use is in Buddhist Cuisine , which has the oldest known use of meat analogues. ''Meat analogue'' may also refer to a meat-based, but healthier and/or less-expensive alternative to a particular meat product, such as surimi. VEGETARIAN MEAT, DAIRY, AND EGG ANALOGUES Some of the more traditional vegetarian meat analogues are based on centuries-old recipes for Seitan (wheat Gluten ), other Grains such as Rice , Mushroom s, Legumes , Tempeh , and/or pressed- Tofu , with flavouring to make the finished product taste like chicken, beef, lamb, ham, sausage, seafood, etc. Some of the more-recent meat analogues include Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP, which is a dry Bulk Commodity derived from soy), Soy Concentrate , Quorn , and Modified Defatted Peanut Flour to replace meat. TVP is produced more than any other meat analogue in most Western nations. Examples of dairy analogues include those based primarily on processed Rice , Soy ( Tofu , Soymilk , Soy Protein Isolate ), Almond , Cashew , Gluten (such as with the first non-dairy creamers), Nutritional Yeast , or a combination of these, plus flavouring to make it taste like milk, cheeses, yogurt, mayonnaise, ice cream, cream cheese, sour cream, whipped cream, buttermilk, rarebit, or butter. Many dairy analogues contain Casein , which is extracted dried milk proteins, when combined with soy and gluten, and are therefore not suitable for Vegan s. Examples of Egg Substitute s include tofu-scramblers, as well as Ener-G and other similar products which recreate the Leavening and binding effects of eggs in baked goods. Many people also use fruit products such as banana paste and applesauce as egg analouges in baking. SURIMI AND OTHER MEAT-BASED MEAT ANALOGUES Many common products such as 'imitation crab meat' are called Surimi , or a processed hash of fish plus flavorings to make it taste more like a shellfish. In some regions, 'Surimi' refers to the finished product or only to products made from Fish , but the same process is also used with Turkey in North America (e.g. turkey-dogs), and thus also called "surimi" often. Examples of surimi include:
Non-meat (vegetarian) products and Surimi products are both marketed often as "imitation" meats, rather than "meat analogues" (e.g. imitation Crab or imitation Shrimp ). NOMENCLATURE The most used term in English for meat analogues is 'fake meat.' 'Meat substitute' is used for other things than meat analogues (such as cabbage), but in this use it is second. 'Mock meat' is third. 'Artificial meat' may be used slightly more than 'meat analogue' and 'meat analog' but the terms are statistically tied for fourth place. The term 'imitation meat' follows in fifth place. The term 'veat' which is predominately used in a commercial context, comes in sixth. While 'synthetic meat' is seventh, as it is seldom used outside of a manufacturing context. See also such terms as 'engineered meat,' 'laboratory meat,' and 'lab-grown meat'. One firm attempted to trademark the pre-existing term 'veat,' but may now be out of business. There appears to be little or no non-commercial use of the termsĖ 'vam' (vegetarian ham), 'veef' (vegetarian beef), 'valmon' (vegetarian salmon), 'vausage' (veggie sausage) , 'vicken' and 'vurkey.' In the case of venison a vegetarian alternative is allegedly called 'v'venison' (pronounced viv- ven'is on), and goat is 'voat'. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
Some manufacturers of imitation meats, dairy, or eggs
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