This current plant-based "meat/seafood" seems like a con to me. It's investors seeing the potential for the space in the future. People virtue signally for it. Yet it almost entirely sucks. People just lie for the virtue signal.
I would not be surprised if the entire industry is making giant loses and it's about owning the space in the future. Where all the restaurants offering "plant-based" alternatives are doing so because it is provided at extremely low to no costs, or they are being paid to have it on their menus. There's always a fake meat brand attached now.
Much better to just get proper vegetarian/vegan food. It's much healthier and tastes much better because people aren't lying because they like the idea. "The impossible burger is just like a real burger, can't tell the difference!!!" Then a little while later, "OMG this new fake meat is even more like a real burger."
I personally find the texture and some of the "meat" taste very disturbing the more realistic they make it
. When my DH makes Impossible burgers at home, he has to really cook mine an thin it out. I really like the more "fake" meat-alternatives, like Morning Star Foods. But that's because my meat eating is
extremely limited. I've had ground beef a few times in my life in the form of tacos, a real burger from McDonalds's once, and had chicken (only white meat) a few times. Never had a pork or shellfish product (for religious reasons) in my life (actually have a severe shellfish allergy).
So as someone who was raised vegetarian from birth (my parents were vegan until I was 4), it is actually nice to have something on the menu at TS restaurants besides pasta or some dish made with mushrooms as the "star of the dish" (I have a huge allergy to mushrooms). For years, DH and I would go to theme parks and eat nothing but junk because there were just the standard foul bean burger that tasted like paste at QS and some over cooked pasta dish at TS. And being a T1 diabetic who needs
some protein, it a nice option to have.
I've grown up with Morning Star Farms foods (and their parent company, Worthington/Loma Linda Foods) as a source of "plant-based" protein before it was even this new "term"! We just called it "veggie-meat". We also ate tofu, seitan, legumes, and other dishes with complex carbs that formed a complete protein.
I feel like it's great to have so many more offerings. Not all of them are a hit, but they certainly are way better than what little vegetarians had to choose from in the past. I agree that it'd be really lovely if all QS places would offer things on the menu like Satuli Canteen does with their tofu bowl! But for once, I can actually get something at Casey's Corner! I can eat something at Le Cellier besides just side-dishes when my DH's "steak-loving" family comes with us. I can actually partake in more than one dish in the Epcot festivals. Overall, I'm glad there are way more plant-based/meat-substitute options at WDW.
OP, having had "tuna" that you've described before (I think it's called Tuno), I find it disgusting as well. It's been made for
decades and my mom and grandmother adore(d) that crap! It's a total pass for me. Real tuna is off-putting for me (sorry for those who love it) and I have not desire to eat this slop either!