<p> Fancy a bottle that could be as edible and tasty as its contents and get rid of the plastic waste that such products currently generate.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Harvard University experts, working on the concept, have filled an orange membrane with orange juice, a tomato-flavoured enclosure with gazpacho (cold Spanish/Portuguese tomato-based raw vegetable soup) and grape packages with wine.<br /><br />Biomedical engineer David Edwards hopes to create a prototype of the bottle out of WikiCells soon. “In the near term, we will be encountering WikiCells in restaurant settings’ as a novelty item,” he said.<br /><br />WikiCells is an edible material created from a biodegradable polymer or plastic and food particles. Essentially, it is an egg-like membrane hard shell. It can be filled with a variety of flavours, including orange juice, wine or chocolate.<br /><br />It could form either a layer that you could peel off a bottle — or, one day, make the entire container. The product, a membrane created using a biodegradable plastic combined with food particles, could either be peeled off or potentially eaten whole.<br /><br />“People in a village in Africa could become plastic bottle-free and make things for themselves. It’s really exciting from a humanitarian point of view,” says Edwards, according to a Daily Mail report.<br /><br />Edwards, professor at Harvard, plans to expand WikiCells to speciality stores and supermarts as a novelty item for restaurants.<br /><br />But he hopes to produce a WikiCell machine that could allow people, especially in the developing world, to make their own bottles without relying on plastic.<br />Agencies</p>
<p> Fancy a bottle that could be as edible and tasty as its contents and get rid of the plastic waste that such products currently generate.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Harvard University experts, working on the concept, have filled an orange membrane with orange juice, a tomato-flavoured enclosure with gazpacho (cold Spanish/Portuguese tomato-based raw vegetable soup) and grape packages with wine.<br /><br />Biomedical engineer David Edwards hopes to create a prototype of the bottle out of WikiCells soon. “In the near term, we will be encountering WikiCells in restaurant settings’ as a novelty item,” he said.<br /><br />WikiCells is an edible material created from a biodegradable polymer or plastic and food particles. Essentially, it is an egg-like membrane hard shell. It can be filled with a variety of flavours, including orange juice, wine or chocolate.<br /><br />It could form either a layer that you could peel off a bottle — or, one day, make the entire container. The product, a membrane created using a biodegradable plastic combined with food particles, could either be peeled off or potentially eaten whole.<br /><br />“People in a village in Africa could become plastic bottle-free and make things for themselves. It’s really exciting from a humanitarian point of view,” says Edwards, according to a Daily Mail report.<br /><br />Edwards, professor at Harvard, plans to expand WikiCells to speciality stores and supermarts as a novelty item for restaurants.<br /><br />But he hopes to produce a WikiCell machine that could allow people, especially in the developing world, to make their own bottles without relying on plastic.<br />Agencies</p>