A screenshot taken on Sept 23, 2021 showing the home page of Impossible Foods Inc.'s website.

Impossible Foods Inc. is launching a new plant-based pork product in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, Singapore and the United States, joining a crowded field trying to replicate the world’s most-consumed meat by targeting consumers in Asia. 

Impossible pork will debut at celebrity chef David Chang’s Momofuku Ssäm Bar in New York on Thursday, and restaurants across the US and Hong Kong will be able to order it from food distributors. The product will be available in more than 120 restaurants in Hong Kong in early October, and enter Singapore's eateries the following month, with a focus on those serving regional cuisine, which is traditionally heavy on pork, the company said. 

Impossible Foods' new plant-based pork product will be available in more than 120 restaurants in Hong Kong in early October, the company said

“People who prefer Asian cuisine are absolutely the consumers who are going to migrate to this product,” Impossible President Dennis Woodside told Bloomberg News in an interview.

The rollout comes less than a month after the Redwood City, California-based company started selling faux-chicken nuggets, expanding from its core line of burger patties and sausages. The acceleration of product development at Impossible underscores the fierce competition between food companies as they try to corner the growing market for imitation meat. 

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Woodside said “whole muscle products” were next. “Think of chicken breast, steak, or pork loin. That muscle is typically denser, chewier, and stringier. That’s a different technical challenge that we’re very focused on solving.”

Still, in its quest to win over Asia, Impossible faces a significant hurdle: a lack of access to consumers on the Chinese mainland, where roughly half the pork eaten worldwide is consumed. Global rival Beyond Meat Inc. started selling its faux-pork in the mainland in November, while mainland startup Zhenmeat started offering it in mid-2020 and Hong Kong’s Green Monday was hawking its OmniPork even before COVID-19. But the mainland authorities haven’t allowed Impossible to enter the market as the majority of its products use heme – an ingredient made from genetically-modified yeast – which requires regulatory approval.

People who prefer Asian cuisine are absolutely the consumers who are going to migrate to this product.

Dennis Woodside, President, Impossible Foods Inc.

Woodside said there were “no updates” yet on whether its pork would be approved by the mainland authorities, saying Impossible wanted to build a production center in the mainland if it was allowed in.

Faux meat also faces an uphill battle with consumers who still prefer real pork, as plant-based versions generally cost more and versions of popular cuts and dishes – including pork chops and barbecued pork – aren’t widely available. 

Impossible aims to bring its prices down to closer to that of real meat by scaling up production capacity, Woodside said. 

READ MORE: Plant-based burger maker launches sausage product in HK

Its US production “has increased by about 14 times in the last 30 months or so,” he said. “As our business grows, we have to constantly be about evaluating new ways of scaling production, whether that’s in the US or overseas.”

Impossible eventually wants to sell packaged pork in grocery stores for cooking at home, he added, and it will be available in ready-to-eat meals in some Hong Kong supermarkets from October.