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County Down producer sets out plans to create world's first cultivated Wagyu burger

Finnebrogue has signed an agreement with cultivated meat specialist Ivy Farm Tecnologies

Finnebrogue Estate's cattle herd

County Down food producer Finnebrogue has laid plans to create the world’s first "cultivated" Wagyu beef derived from cells from its own cattle herd.

The Downpatrick company, which makes a range of products from sausages to nitrate-free bacon to vegan products, said it has signed a letter of intent with an Oxfordshire-based cultivated meat specialist, Ivy Farm Technologies.

The two companies have agreed to come together to produce cultivated wagyu burgers “once the nascent industry is given the regulatory green light”. Unlike traditionally produced food products, cultivated meat has to go through pre-market authorization from the Food Standards Agency.

In preparation for a relaxing of the rules, Ivy Farm is cultivating cells from the Wagyu cattle herd on Finnebrogue’s County Down estate.

The process of creating the cultivated Wagyu beef burger involves taking cells from Finnebrogue’s herd and cultivating these in fermentation tanks at Ivy Farm’s facility in Oxford. The mince meat is grown and harvested from Ivy Farm’s pilot plant, one which resembles a craft beer brewery.

Jago Pearson, Chief Strategy Officer at Finnebrogue, said the company hasn’t been bound by convention.

“Our task is always to make food that is nutritious, delicious and sustainable for food-loving consumers up and down the land – and so we are excited to strike a partnership with Ivy Farm that will allow us to explore the future potential of cultivated meat. Ivy Farm will be cultivating wagyu beef from cells derived from the herd we keep on our Finnebrogue Estate in County Down, Northern Ireland.

“In time, we are excited to help realise the potential this may bring in producing sustainable food that can feed a growing global population.”