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With Impossible Pork, I was able to taste an off-limits meat for the first time.

Abrar Al-Heeti/CNET

“This feels so wrong,” I think as I lift the sandwich to my mouth. My hands are shaking and doubt starts to creep in. I fight off the hesitation and take a bite. 

It’s hard to taste the “meat” at first. The flavor combines with those of carrots, cucumbers and cilantro in the banh mi. I break off a chunk to taste it by itself, untainted. It has a chewy consistency and a flavor similar to that of chicken, albeit with a bit of a more savory, smoky essence. 

“So this is what pork tastes like,” I think. I put the sandwich down after a couple of bites and call it a day. “I think I’ve done enough damage.”

As a life-long practicing Muslim, I have never eaten pork. Billions of people around the world also avoid the meat because of religious or dietary restrictions, as it’s forbidden in interpretations of faiths including Islam, Judaism, Hinduism and some sects of Christianity. But what I’m eating now is a new . It’s the latest creation from , the California-based company home to lab-grown “meat” products such as the . 

Its latest concoction, , made its debut this Monday at in Las Vegas. 

Impossible Pork looks, smells and cooks like the real thing. It’s slightly disconcerting.

CNET

Impossible Foods says its , which is gluten free and designed for kosher and halal certification, can be used as a substitute for ground pork in any recipe. It doesn’t contain any animal hormones or antibiotics, and the company says it offers the same “savory neutrality” as ground meat from pigs. (While I obviously can’t attest to this, my pork-eating CNET colleagues agree.)

It can be hard to mentally separate this plant-based substitute from its pig-derived counterpart. That’s one downside to creating something that so closely emulates real pork, I suppose. 

Sure, there have been times I’ve bitten into a slice of pizza to discover pepperoni sneakily placed under the cheese, or found bacon discreetly sprinkled on my salad. But those were accidents, and they resulted in me quickly spitting the meat out. This time I’m intentionally eating something designed to mimic something I’ve been taught to avoid my entire life. 

“I grew up with a dislike for pork, and that’s something I’m actually proud of,” said Mustafa Umar, an imam based in Anaheim, California. “If people come and ask me, ‘What do you think? Should I try [Impossible Pork]?’ I would say no. Don’t do it unless you’ve already been eating pork and you’re trying to quit.”

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Still, Impossible Foods sees this as an opportunity for people to try something they might not get to taste otherwise.

“This product isn’t designed specifically to target people who have religious objections to eating pigs, but it’s important for us, so we will definitely seek certification as kosher and halal,” Impossible Foods CEO and founder Pat Brown said during a visit to the company’s Redwood City, California, headquarters. “For those Jewish people and Muslims who have always wanted to eat a pig — I doubt there are many, but if there are any — this is the opportunity.”

Uncharted territory

Despite how strange it felt to try Impossible Pork, it was an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. This was my chance to taste something I never could have eaten before. In addition to the banh mi, which was made using an Impossible Pork patty, I sampled dumplings made with the ground meat substitute. In both instances, I had to fight a gut feeling that I was eating something off-limits. That’s a feeling that might come to others who have sworn off the meat on religious grounds. 

Many faiths, including Islam and Judaism, forbid pork because . There’s also the notion in both religions that avoiding pork is simply a commandment from God. 

Umar said he’s opposed to Impossible Foods seeking halal certification for a “pork” product, and wouldn’t encourage Muslim organizations to support the effort. 

“It’s like a legitimization and a promotion of that product,” he said, “and this is not a product I would want to promote in the community.”

Alan Cook, a rabbi in Champaign, Illinois, says he also isn’t particularly drawn to try Impossible Pork because pork’s not a meat he misses. He points to a common attitude among many Jews that “if one is choosing to live a kosher (or halal) lifestyle, God doesn’t want us to see it as burdensome. It’s not about finding these workarounds and substitutes, and we should be happy with the bounty of foods that we do have available to us.”

For those Jewish people and Muslims who have always wanted to eat a pig — I doubt there are many, but if there are any — this is the opportunity.

Impossible Foods CEO Pat Brown

Still, some Jewish followers might interpret kosher law to mean being conscious of what we put into our bodies, Cook notes, and an argument could be made that consuming plant-based products is one way to meet religious requirements if it has less of an environmental impact than meat production.

New York-based Rabbi Mordechai Lightstone, founder of , a community for Jews in tech and digital media, said a product is safe to eat if it’s made from kosher ingredients and is kosher certified, “even if it approaches the taste and smell of a non-kosher product.” He added that “if it makes the world of kosher open to more people and accessible to more people, then it’s great.”

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