A mother was left utterly stunned when the chicken she was preparing for dinner fell apart into stringy strands resembling spaghetti. Clarifying that pasta was not on the menu that evening, she posted on Facebook a video showing the raw chicken disintegrating in her hands.
“I think it’s that fake meat,” she remarked in her now viral post, which has sparked discussions online about veganism.
Read on to discover more about the stringy chicken!
Alesia Cooper from Irving, Texas, shared a troubling image of a chicken breast that seemed to resist its fate on a dinner plate on March 21.
“I’ve been hesitant to share this, but since I had to see it, so do you all,” Cooper wrote. The post included a picture of the chicken shredding into spaghetti-like strands and continued: “A couple of weeks ago, while preparing dinner for my kids and cleaning the meat as usual, I returned to find it had turned into this (SIC).”
The mother of two, who mentioned she bought the chicken breast from the budget supermarket Aldi, added: “Lol, I think it’s that fake meat, but I’m not sure. Anyway, I haven’t cooked chicken off the bone since.”
Social media users quickly flooded the comments section with their thoughts, with some speculating that the chicken was either 3D printed or cultivated in a petri dish.
“That’s lab-grown chicken; it’s a new method of production due to recent bird flu outbreaks and resource shortages. They announced last year that they found a way to produce chicken in a lab, and that’s what’s now available in stores,” one commenter argued.
“GMO lab meat,” another user chimed in.
A third user concluded, “It’s fake; I don’t buy it anymore.”
One commenter provided a more rational explanation for the shredded chicken breast: “It’s not lab-grown or 3D printed. It comes from real chickens. The issue arises when greedy producers force-feed chickens growth hormones, causing them to grow too quickly.”
Bigger Breasts
According to The Wall Street Journal, along with a tough, chewy meat known as “woody breast,” “spaghetti meat” is reportedly a consequence of breeding practices aimed at producing larger-breasted chickens more rapidly.
This results in more meat per bird and increased profits.
“There is evidence that these abnormalities are linked to fast-growing birds,” Dr. Massimiliano Petracci, a professor of agriculture and food science at the University of Bologna in Italy, told the WSJ.
While terms like “woody breast” and “spaghetti meat” may sound alarming, industry experts assert that consuming them is not harmful. However, it does pose a risk to the chickens, whose large bodies are often too heavy for their small legs to support.
Chubby Chickens
Data from the National Chicken Council indicates that broiler chickens—those raised for meat—are growing significantly faster than in the past. In 2000, the average chicken reached market weight at 47 days old, weighing 5.03 pounds. By 2023, the average chicken still reached market weight at 47 days, but now weighed 6.54 pounds.
In comparison, nearly a century ago, broilers took 112 days to reach a market weight of 2.5 pounds in 1925.
These changes reflect the rising demand for white meat over the past century, prompting the industry to breed chickens with “proportionally larger breasts.”
Dr. Michael Lilburn, a professor at Ohio State University’s Poultry Research Center, told the Washington Post: “If people continue to consume more chicken, the birds will likely need to grow even larger… We’ll also have to increase the proportion of breast meat in each bird.”
“What many don’t realize is that consumer demand is driving the industry’s adjustments,” Lilburn noted, referring to the public’s appetite for chicken nuggets, wings, sandwiches, and other inexpensive chicken products. “It’s a relatively small but vocal minority raising important questions. The majority of the U.S. population remains indifferent to the origins of their food, as long as it’s affordable.”