
OSAKA 鈥 No longer confined to the imagination, the food of the future is available to see and even eat for attendees of the 2025 Osaka-Kansai Expo.
The Expo features visionary culinary innovations meticulously created using cutting-edge technology.
Beyond their delicious taste, some foods offer high nutritional value and practical solutions for issues such as food shortages and allergies.
Leading companies and research institutions are introducing a wide variety of those foods and announcing ground-breaking achievements that will shape the future of food.
Multi-coloured rice
Inside the 鈥淓volving Frozen Foods鈥 showcase at the Earth Mart pavilion, conceptualised by broadcasting writer Kundo Koyama, visitors will find a colourful assortment of green, yellow, and red 鈥渞egenerated rice鈥.
Ingredients such as rice, vegetables, meat and eggs are frozen and then crushed into a powder. The powder is reshaped into rice grains for easy consumption.
There are a variety of flavours made through the combination of ingredients. One of the flavours is called 鈥渟alad rice,鈥 while another is named 鈥渢akana fried rice flavoured rice鈥.
Another flavour is 鈥渇amily rice,鈥 inspired by oyakodon, which is a bowl of rice topped with chicken and eggs.
Professor Hidemitsu Furukawa of Yamagata University developed regenerated rice in co-operation with Nichirei Foods Inc., a major frozen food company based in Tokyo.
Although conventional methods for pulverising ingredients rely on heat or desiccation, the drawback has been the accompanying loss of moisture and aroma.
However, the team successfully created powdered ingredients while preserving their original moisture and aroma by instantaneously freezing them using liquid nitrogen.
They said that adjusting the blending ratio enables precise control over taste, aroma and nutritional value.
鈥淭his approach allows for the use of agricultural produce discarded after a harvest that doesn鈥檛 reach the market, leading to a reduction in food loss and waste. It also supports farmers,鈥 Furukawa said.
Tomoko Kadoya, 64, from Kanazawa, looked at the regenerated rice and said, 鈥淚鈥檓 surprised and thrilled that such food will be available in the near future. I am curious to try it and find out what it tastes like.鈥
3D printed meat
The Osaka Healthcare Pavilion, presented by Osaka Prefecture and Osaka City, is enticing the public with the prospect of making meat at home by 2050. Visitors can view 3D printed cultured meat.
In 2023, the University of Osaka and companies such as Kyoto-based Shimadzu Corp. created a joint venture called the Consortium for Future Innovation by Cultured Meat.
The consortium aims to commercialise technology that cultivates muscle and fat cells harvested from wagyu beef and processes them to create meat with a 3D printer.
Pavilion visitors can look at two pieces of cultured meat, each 9cm long and 15cm wide, at the booth. They were produced over about six months.
Cultured meat pieces are displayed at the Expo. Photo / The Japan 九一星空无限
The ratio of lean to fatty parts can be adjusted to create marbled meat, with one of the pieces having a checkerboard pattern made with the lean and fatty sections.
According to Michiya Matsusaki, a professor at the University of Osaka and the consortium鈥檚 representative, they are close to reproducing the flavour and texture of marbled meat.
During the Expo鈥檚 period, they plan to grill the cultured meat at an event, allowing visitors to smell its aroma.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 even imagine what it tastes like,鈥 said a primary school student from Toyonaka, Osaka Prefecture. 鈥淚 wonder if we鈥檒l be eating it regularly when I grow up,鈥 the student added curiously.
Rice flour soft serve cones
Visitors are flocking to eat innovative dairy-free soft serve ice cream and cones which are made without egg or wheat.
Nissei Co. developed the dessert. The firm, based in Ibaraki, Osaka Prefecture, is a manufacturer and distributor of soft serve-related products. Beans make up the cream of the soft serve and the cones are made from rice flour.
Five flavours, including vanilla, matcha, and strawberry, are available for 楼700 ($8) each at the Osaka Healthcare Pavilion. Commercialisation, however, presents challenges such as costs, according to the company.
鈥淓ating soft serve is often a joyful experience. We want to create a future where everyone can enjoy it,鈥 said a project leader from the company, outlining the project鈥檚 goal.
Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you
Get the iHeart App
Get more of the radio, music and podcasts you love with the FREE iHeartRadio app. Scan the QR code to download now.
Download from the app stores
Stream unlimited music, thousands of radio stations and podcasts all in one app. iHeartRadio is easy to use and all FREE