Unique sushi made from glowing fish
The recipe for this special sushi is the genetically engineered zebrafish being sold by Yorktown Technologies.
The sushi glowing in the dark is stimulating the curiosity of many Americans.
>>>Video: Teaching sushi from glowing fish
Videos teaching how to make glowing sushi attract a lot of viewers online. The recipe for this special sushi is the genetically engineered zebrafish being sold by Yorktown Technologies.
Glowing sushi in the night. (Source: Daily Mail)
By adding more natural glowing genes to fish, scientists create glowing fish whenever their environment is polluted.
Now, a variety of glowing fish with exotic colors, such as red fire, electric blue, sun orange, cosmic green, galactic purple, are being sold in aquarium stores.
Sushi including fish mixed with mustard creates a very characteristic flavor. However, not all Americans have the opportunity to enjoy this special dish, because California is having a law banning all genetically modified fish.
In addition, the authors of the glowing sushi are planning to create a recipe for glowing mice with the same technique as sushi making techniques.
- If you think of the original meaning of sushi as raw ingredients, you are wrong!
- Sushi is world famous and the birth coincidentally
- Eating sushi can harm the heart
- Fish glowing egg-shaped
- Eating sushi is safe or not?
- Kisaku Suzuki - The person who revolutionized the sushi industry in anger
- Why does Japan take a decade to train a professional sushi chef?
- 8 things to know when eating sushi
- More than 180 species of fish are glowing enchanting in the sea
- Vietnam successfully implanted glowing fish
'Superpowers' genetically alter ink The fish spotted 'ghostly green light' London began producing DNA for biotechnology Gene adjustment technology has a new turning point, promising to cure HIV completely Bill Gates, Google supports DNA editing research to cure genetic diseases Genetically modified after a sleepless night For the first time in embryonic genetic modification history Scientists have figured out how to change the genome in humans