Italy's Plan To Ban Lab-Grown Food Would Hurt Cuisine and Consumers
The move would close a promising culinary door and deny Italian consumers the opportunity to buy products that fit their preferences.

This month, Italy submitted its culinary heritage to UNESCO for designation as an "intangible cultural heritage." The country's bid named the cuisine's rituals, local flavors, and presence in social life as reasons why it should be recognized and protected. In other words, Italian food is special—so special, in fact, that the Italian government is looking to outlaw products that it feels might corrupt it.
The country is looking to crack down on the "decadence" of lab-grown food. A bill approved yesterday by the Italian government would ban "the use of laboratory-produced food and animal feed as it aims to safeguard the country's agri-food heritage, its agriculture minister told a news conference after a Cabinet meeting," reported Reuters. If the bill passes, "Italian industry will not be allowed to produce food or feed 'from cell cultures or tissues derived from vertebrate animals.'" Violators would face fines of up to 60,000 euros ($65,000 U.S.).
Health Minister Orazio Schillaci said the bill was "based on the precautionary principle" since there are "no scientific studies yet on the effects of synthetic foods." Several members of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's populist Brothers of Italy party have voiced their support for the bill on more political grounds. Minister Francesco Lollobrigida claimed that laboratory products "do not guarantee quality, well-being and the protection of our culture, our tradition." Augusta Montaruli, a lawmaker in Meloni's party, said she was "proud" that Italy would be "the first nation in the world to stop this decadence."
But it's a move that misunderstands the evolution of cuisine generally and Italian food in particular, and one that would deny Italian consumers the opportunity to buy products that fit their preferences.
Much of Italy's "traditional" food is relatively new, widely adopted only in the past century. Alberto Grandi, a professor of food history at the University of Parma, made many such claims in a Financial Times interview last week: Panettone only became soft and dome-shaped in the 1900s; tiramisu only appeared in cookbooks in the 1980s; the "exact modern-day match" to traditional parmesan is "Wisconsin parmesan." Several Italian food historians, including Grandi, claim that carbonara—a mainstay Roman pasta dish made with eggs, cheese, pork, and black pepper—didn't reach its modern form until after World War II. Though many of the specifics are contested by Italian food purists, it's clear that the cuisine is wont to change.
On a more basic level, some of Italy's most beloved ingredients only came to the country through cross-continental exchange. The tomato, for instance, reached Italy from the Americas in the 1500s. David Gentilcore, a professor of history and author of Pomodoro! A History of the Tomato in Italy, told The Boston Globe that most dishes that use it, like pasta al pomodoro, "are fairly recent—from the 1870s or '80s." Gnocchi, polenta, and torta tenerina would be impossible without the potatoes, corn, and cacao that explorers brought from the New World to the Old.
If past governments had banned any of this development in the name of culinary purity, Italian food would be far less rich today. The people who consume it would have far fewer options to suit their palettes and dietary preferences—something the Italian government may well ensure if it bans lab-grown products.
As Reason's Ronald Bailey has written, cultivated meat companies are using far less land and water to make their products than traditional meat production consumes, both huge environmental benefits. What's more, animals don't have to die for these products, which is a huge plus for consumers with ethical concerns about traditional meat production. Cultivated meat is already commercially available in Singapore and on its way to American plates. Italy would do well to follow their lead instead of closing off avenues for its cuisine to evolve and denying consumers the opportunity to buy products that fit their needs.
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Isn't it bad enough that "Italian" restaurants in Italy don't even have breadsticks.
Please..an Irish immigrant to the US has no legitimacy preaching to Italians on fake meat given how bad Irish food is. Back off Fiona....
They had better ban cascatelli, too, while they are at it.
Why?
Cut to the chase - how does this impact undocumented immigrants?
Cut to the chase – how does this impact
undocumented immigrantsdrag shows and sex workers?What do you think lab grown meat is. Sex workers need natural meat. But trans women sometimes have lab grown meat.
In other words, Italian food is special—so special, in fact, that the Italian government is looking to outlaw products that it feels might corrupt it.
Olive Garden hardest hit.
Needs more salt.
Olive Garden becomes a mexican restaurant, doesn't make any changes to the menu.
Olive Garden is to Italian food as TexMex is to Mexican food.
Are you seriously saying that olive garden is better than actual Italian food???
The new Chi-Chi's.
Damn, corporate fascists hate it when people fight back.
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Pizza is the food with the highest penetration worldwide. Try finding a country where it isn't available. So Italy does have something to defend. Fuck that lab-grown Frankenstein shit.
Good news! If you don't want to consume that lab-grown Frankenstein shit, you don't have to! But why should others be prevented from consuming it if they so desire?
Because it will be forced on you in the near future.
Progressives aren't people
A lot of the toppings that get added to pizzas are scarier than “that lab-grown Frankenstein shit” and/or known to be unheathful.
People don’t want Bill Gates cancer meat.
List these scary pizza toppings please.
Bell peppers. Disgusting.
Pineapple.
anchovies
Corn (Japan).
Cite?
How do the first two sentences of your comment connect to the last two? Will lab grown food's existence somehow affect the availability of pizza (which in most places bears little resemblance to traditional Neapolitan pizza)?
Wait till it’s mandatory.
(To save the planet)
I don't think cuisine means what you think it means.
I don't think that the 'cuisine' will be hardest hit, either.
It’s not actual “Lab food” unless it comes from the Labrador region of Canadia
Or for the bow-wow.
The move would close a promising culinary door and deny Italian consumers the opportunity to buy products that fit their preferences.
I'm honestly curious who prefers the lab grown "food".
Someone must or there wouldn't have been this much money spent in developing it.
Maybe vegetarians who object to meat for ethical/moral reasons. They might be interested in a burger that didn't come from a dead animal. It might end up costing less money once the process is perfected, so it might appeal to people who couldn't otherwise afford meat. And who knows, it might be indistinguishable from dead animal flesh in processed foods.
It's not on my bucket list, but it might appeal to some people.
Wherever there is some progressive dystopian bullshit, sarc is there to defend it.
WTF? You think companies offering different things to segments of the market is a progressive notion?
It is when governments are simultaneously cutting meat production.
I would try it.
I might even use it for some cooking if the price is cheaper. Say you are making some dish like Buffalo wings where the chicken is going to be slathered in hot sauce, anyway.
Another intriguing possibility is that, via genetic engineering, someone might come up with a new flavor of meat that is tastier than any naturally-occurring meat.
I keep picturing all the people with knee-jerk negative reactions here as cavemen refusing to eat meat that has been cooked over a fire.
I am very particular about my food, especially meat.
I do not buy any meat from a store. Everything I consume is either hunted, fished, or farmed locally. Restaurants are an occasional event; and almost always when traveling.
Unless something drastic were to happen, I'm not eating lab grown meat.
Happy to hear you are able to choose those preferences for yourself.
I'm more curious about the protein chains of the meat, are they maintained. Vegan protein replacement is not gram for gram equal due to how the body processes the protein chains. I also prefer real meat due to just the vitamin contents and health basis.
I'm not sure, but if it's actual animal cells I would think the proteins would be the same as usual.
I'm sticking with real dead animals because I can't imagine this is going to be any kind of real substitute any time soon for real meat and I have no ethical problems with meat eating.
… cavemen refusing to eat meat that has been cooked over a fire.
Another thing that probably never happened.
Faggots
Of course this is silly. But if you aren't completely unfamiliar with Italian politics and EU food protectionism, this is not the least surprising and probably the least crazy thing the Italian government has done today.
Crazier than when they had “hug a Chinese “ during the pandemic?
I said "today".
But if you aren’t completely unfamiliar with Italian politics and EU food protectionism, this is not the least surprising and probably the least crazy thing the Italian government has done today
And don't even get started on French rules about wine.
Reason mag chooses to be ignorant (or purposefully obtuse) about how the rest of the world views freedom.
Are you arguing that libertarianism should adopt cultural relativism?
No, but one shouldn't pretend that the Italian government gives one shit about libertarian approaches to food regulation.
100% safe and edible?
Say, has anyone seen Scott's article about the transman all the news services are disrespecting?
Something about Nashville......?
Take the last train to Nashville
And I'll meet you at the station
You can be here by 4:30
After genital mutilation
And I must go
Oh, no, no, no
Oh, no, no, no
And I don't know if I'm ever comin' home
Oh, Christ. We're going to have lab-grown chunks of meat applying for refugee status, aren't we?
I’d be less leery of any of this if it wasn’t being combined with governments forcing massive cuts to meat production world wide, and the like.
They probably complain that it insults the dignity of the animals it imitates.
Please..an Irish immigrant to the US has no legitimacy preaching to Italians on fake meat given how bad Irish food is. Back off Fiona....
Bailey is not a scientist..Reason needs to fire him and get Tom Massie (a real engineer who understands "green" energy) to be your science writer.
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While I agree that the Italian argument is asinine I also have no interest in lab grown meat.
It's Italia. Not having a bidet in your home is illegal.
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