Mushrooms come from Trucks
Where do mushrooms come from? Most people think from the forest after a good rain if we’re talking about wild mushrooms, or from manure piles in some deep dark cave if we’re talking about cultivated ones. But mushrooms could come from trucks, and not in the sense that they are delivered by them, but actually be grown on board on the way to the supermarket. Distributors could become farmers turning their trucks into high density growing facilities and reprogramming what is normally a waste of time into essential growth time.
Our obsession with fresh food irrespective of season and location fuels constant developments in extending their life after the moment of harvest until the point of consumption. Ripening is manipulated through the removal or addition of the ripening gas ethylene, and breathing is slowed down through extensive refrigeration and through modified atmosphere packaging. But these so-called post-harvest technologies are not only economically and ecologically expensive, they are essentially damage control measures that only slow the eventual deterioration down.
‘Made in Transit’ proposes to shift the paradigm from preserving freshness to enabling growth along the way, a shift from ‘best before’ to ‘ready by’ for perishable goods. Growing food on the way would mean it gets better as it travels and that it would be still alive upon arrival, ready for harvest by the consumer (bypassing harvest labour, which for mushrooms can account for 40% of overall production cost). Applied to mushrooms, it also could mean other unexpected things, like more diversity in our supermarkets as some of the most fragile mushrooms (too fragile to withstand transport) could theoretically become available anywhere by growing them on the way. The global industry already shapes our food’thickening a tomato’s wall so it can withstand rough handling, or growing watermelons square so they stack more efficiently. Humans created this global condition. The next step is when the global market starts to produce our food, literally.

What a wonderful idea this is! Could they do this for other plants and animals as well.?? How about chickens? They take six weeks to grow.
they grow up so fast these days
hhaha good part on the industry i suppose …….