Some people online claim that when vegetables turn clear or translucent during cooking, it’s proof that food isn’t real anymore. The idea is that what looks like vegetables are actually synthetic or plastic-based materials designed to imitate real food.
The argument usually goes like this:
People notice onions, cabbage, or other vegetables becoming soft and almost see-through when heated. Instead of recognizing it as normal cooking behavior, they interpret it as the material “melting” or “changing form” in a way that doesn’t seem natural. From there, the leap is made that these foods must be manufactured.
The theory often expands into a broader claim that: • Food supply chains are being altered • Real produce is being replaced or mixed with artificial substitutes • Texture changes during cooking are evidence of synthetic materials
Videos get shared showing vegetables stretching, becoming glossy, or appearing slightly transparent, with captions like:
“This isn’t real food” “They’re feeding us plastic”
From a conspiracy mindset, the “clear” look is treated like a material failure, as if heat is revealing what the food is “actually made of.”
⸻
Why this idea spreads
This kind of claim spreads easily because: • It’s visual (people see the change happen) • It feels unusual if you don’t know the science • It taps into existing distrust of food systems and corporations
Once people are already skeptical, normal changes start to look suspicious.
⸻
Reality check (quick, no fluff)
Vegetables turning translucent when cooked is completely normal. It’s caused by: • cell walls breaking down • water redistribution • light passing through softened tissue
There’s no plastic involved.
⸻
Bottom line
The “plastic food” idea comes from misunderstanding how food behaves under heat. The visual change is real, but the explanation being pushed is not.
Mmmmmm petrochemicals 🤤