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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Quorn: WTF Is it?

164 replies

MissMisery · 15/01/2018 16:40

Background... Lifelong veggie, regularly ate soya mince as a meat alternative during younger days, but more and more over the years have been eating and enjoying quorn.

I never really questioned its origins, after all, Mo Farah tells us its good! And it's low fat, far smaller carbon footprint and so on.. And I'm sure they used to say something on the packet about mushrooms from Marlow (what could be more wholesome?!)
So to my mind, it was a mushroom based product. Only it isn't......

The penny dropped whilst at a friends house. She had made a chicken curry for the meat-eaters, and had very kindly made a quorn version for me. Her dh, who is very much a 'meat and two veg' type of bloke positivlely balked when I suggested he try the quorn version. His reaction: "You couldn't pay me to eat that stuff... I was at ICI when they developed it".

Developed At ICI??!! What about the lovely mushrooms from Marlow?? A quick google search has confirmed what he said. It WAS developed by ICI, and Quorn have actually been in trouble here with advertising standards(and in the US) for suggesting it is mushroom based.

It is, of course 'mycro-protein' and a type of fungus or bacteria. This is I suppose, a natural product, but what concerns me is the process they use to texture it, which they seem rather reluctant to divulge, and does not need to be listed under ingredients. I suppose this could be an understandable desire to protect their method of preparation, but something about this is really starting to bother me.

Have I just been spectacularly naive? (I'm pre-empting a chorus of 'Of course it's ghastly artificial shite!!!' here..)

I would very much like to be reassured as to its safety, particularly as my dc eat it too. Also any alternative to the meat industry has to be a good thing..

I would love to hear from anyone with a food science background.

Thanks in advance for any input.

OP posts:
drivingmisspotty · 15/01/2018 21:09

Oh that was so long and I posted it twice by mistake. Sorry Blush

humansnowman · 15/01/2018 21:38

Granted I do eat some weird things- seitan anybody? Makes a cracking duckless pancake
Oh and I like and readily eat tofu which if prepared and cooked properly is actually quite edible.

Quorn though. Wouldn't touch the stuff with a ten foot pole. Bleurgh. Not only does it all have a particular taste to it, blowing up like a balloon isn't much fun either.
My guess is that it's more like penicillin than mushrooms only because penicillin does dodgy stuff to me as well whereas shrooms don't.

I wouldn't describe myself as a vegetarian though even though I don't eat eggs or red meat.

mrsBeverleyGoldberg · 15/01/2018 22:16

Gosh dailymaileatmyshit, that's a vibrant description !Grin

Teabagtits · 15/01/2018 22:40

Quorn makes me quite sick. Then again mushrooms do the same. Maybe i'm just not a fun-gi.... gettit?

SugarPlumFerry · 15/01/2018 23:32

Quorn is fine. Some people can eat it some people can't. I can't eat soya (makes me fart for 48 hours) or latex related fruit (makes my throat close up) but you don't see me harping on about it being not a food and disgusting slime. It's more of a proteiny sponge tbh...

Mushrooms and truffles are delicious fungus. Blue cheese is slimy and mouldy and tasty. And a lot of antibiotics are mould processed in labs. What's wrong with labs? They're clean?

MockneyReject · 16/01/2018 08:24

Any proper scientists around?
Why does Quorn cause problems for so many people? (Roughly half my friends/family are vegetarian/vegan, and around half of them have experienced problems.

What about 'clean meat'. Everything I've read is from those involved in it's creation. Anyone know of any impartial research?

TIA

whiskyowl · 16/01/2018 08:33

I'm not a proper scientist, but I think it's a case of allergy to the ingredients - gluten, eggs, mycoprotein.

Sandsnake · 16/01/2018 08:42

Another one allergic to Quorn here! But as PP rightly said, I almost certainly wouldn't be posting if I wasn't and so it will heavily skew this thread. Personally, I think that if you enjoy it and are not allergic and they've shown it to be safe (which I presume they have to get their certificate?!) then there's no problem with eating it. One thing to consider though is that if you get mild allergic symptoms to it it's best to stop eating it straight away, as they can escalate with further exposure. I've only had it four - five times. First time - no reaction, second - maybe a bit iffy, by the last time I ate it it had escalated to days of stomach cramps and awful diarrhoea and me coming out in full body hives Confused

Gingernaut · 16/01/2018 10:08

Unless you eat the other ingredients on a regular basis, it's hard to ascertain what you're allergic to.

There is a vegan version of this stuff, so if it's egg, then you're in luck.....Hmm

www.quorn.co.uk/products/vegan

susurration · 16/01/2018 11:07

mockneyreject like I said, most allergens are protein based. Quorn contains a mycoprotein made from a type of mould fungus. Eggs and Milk are also a type of protein. I am definitely allergic to the mould element of quorn. I eat eggs and milk on a regular-daily basis and have no ill effects.

I'm also allergic to raw pineapple- it contains a type of acid protein. My lips and tongue swell and tingle and the older I get the worse this reaction is getting. However, I can eat cooked pineapple- the acid protein is cooked out of it by heating.

PorklessPie · 16/01/2018 11:30

I was a vegetarian from childhood and I never liked it, I'm vegan now and I have tried the vegan quorn and it is awful had a fishy taste Confused.

PasDeDeux · 16/01/2018 13:12

DH and I eat Quorn several times a week with no adverse effects! I am really surprised at the amount of people on this thread who are allergic to it. Their Swedish style balls are delish, had it last night with wholewheat spaghetti, tomatoes and lots of veg.

BothersomeCrow · 16/01/2018 13:56

It's just yeast - which is a single-celled fungus or "a tiny relative of the mushroom". So will be rich in forms of protein that some people may have difficulty digesting initially (like some vegetarians find after some time they don't digest meat well any more).

I use quorn mock nuggets for kids parties as it avoids meat and they are cheaper and lower fat than chicken nuggets, and the odd bit of other quorn stuff.

Spangles1963 · 16/01/2018 18:09

I think it is disgusting stuff. I'm not a total vegetarian,but I don't eat a lot of meat (just don't like the taste and texture) but I like tofu and soya protein so I thought I might like quorn. Bleurgh no it was vile. I get sick of seeing adverts banging on about how wonderful it is!

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