The GIANT LEAPS consortium of 35 partners has collaborated successfully over the first 36 months, engaging stakeholders to gather input and share interim results. To understand consumer preferences across Europe, research was conducted in four countries, comparing various protein sources and exploring trade-offs between aspects such as product format, nutrition, and price.
From a shortlist of nine protein sources, 20 alternative protein ingredients were characterized and studied for their techno-functional potential. This led to the development of prototypes including vegan burgers, meatball analogues, cheese spread, egg replacers for bakery, and milk and yogurt analogues.
Ensuring food safety is essential. GIANT LEAPS is investigating safety and allergenicity using advanced cell-based models to improve assessment quality and reduce animal testing. Ethical approvals were obtained for studies to monitor potential adverse effects post-market and to explore how best to inform consumers about allergenicity risks.
Digestibility and nutritional value are key for health. Improved lab methods were developed and applied to the shortlisted proteins and prototypes. A human study on faba bean and microalgae digestibility is nearly complete. A ring trial across 17 labs to standardize a gut barrier model is also nearing completion.
Sustainability assessments require high-quality data. Significant efforts were made to collect data from partners, stakeholders, and external sources. While data gaps remain, the full Sustainability Assessment Framework has been applied to yellow Chlorella protein as a showcase, with publication in progress.
GIANT LEAPS is building an open, cloud-based data platform to host project and external data on alternative proteins. The platform structure is defined and online, with AI tools in development to optimize data use. Data collection is ongoing.
The project’s main goal is to define perspectives on future European diets optimized for health and environmental impact. Health and environmental parameters have been selected, and initial analyses of current and future dietary scenarios are underway.
Results are shared actively, including 18 peer-reviewed publications, 3000+ followers on LinkedIn, 6-monthly newsletters, 15+ oral presentations at conferences. Educational materials are in development for students and professionals. Young Investigator engagement and skill development is ongoing through webinars and social media campaigns.