Consumer interest in a shift toward moderating animal products in their diets (flexitarian) is constantly increasing. One way to meet this consumer demand is through hybrid meat products, defined as those in which a portion of the meat is substituted by plant protein. This review article aims to analyze literature regarding the impact of replacing meat proteins with other alternative proteins on the functional and nutritional properties of hybrid products. Different food matrices created by hybrid products have impact on the digestive processes and outcomes in vitro and in vivo, and the bioavailability of protein, lipid, and mineral nutrients is modified, hence these aspects are reviewed. The functional properties of hybrid products change with regard to type of alternative protein source used. In hybrid products, deficiencies in amino acids in alternative proteins are balanced by amino acids from meat proteins, resulting in wholesome products. Additionally, animal protein degrades into peptides in the gut which bind non-animal iron and increase the availability of iron from the alternative protein material. This relationship may support the development of hybrid products offering products with increased iron bioavailability and a previously unseen beneficial nutritional composition. The effects of alternative protein addition in hybrid meat products on protein and mineral digestibility remains unclear. More research is required to clarify the interaction of the protein-food matrix as well as its effects on digestibility. Very little research has been conducted on the oxidative stability and microbiological safety of hybrid products.
Keywords: Hybrid meat; alternative meat; blended meat; flexitarian; meat analogue; non-meat protein.