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Apple Waste Turned into High-Fibre Meatballs

Apple waste visual media

Apple waste might just be the new secret sauce in meat hybrids. A Cornell study shows the pomace, the skins, seeds, cores and pulp left over from juicing, can be freeze-dried, milled, and blended into beef meatballs at up to 20% without consumers noticing a thing. The result? A fibre boost, longer shelf-life, and a lower reliance on animal protein, all in a format tasting and feeling the same.


For apple growers and juice makers in Australia and New Zealand, this turns a costly waste stream into a circular revenue play. Instead of trucking 25–30% of fruit mass to landfill or feedlots, processors could turn pomace into a functional additive for meat packers, hybrid protein innovators, and plant-based makers chasing fibre and bioactives. Suddenly, the humble apple sits at the table of the protein transition.


For more on this trend go to TRENOS SiGINT LINK


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