But vegans and other animal-friendly folks aren’t having it. They’re upset that the country’s new meat money makes handling bills an ethically compromising situation.

Advertisement
Advertisement

“Not cool at all,” one Twitter user complained. “I go to a lot of trouble to avoid animal products. Going to start refusing them.”

An online petition has already been launched on Change.org demanding that the Bank of England stop using animal fat in the production of the new notes. The petition has over 50,000 digital signatures already. But the country is unlikely to stop using animal fat. In fact, both the £10 note and the £20 note are scheduled to use the same production process by 2020.

Advertisement

Incidentally, beef tallow is precisely what made McDonald’s fries taste so good in the 1980s. It’s not just your imagination—Mickey D’s fries really did taste better when you were a kid. The fast food company stopped frying in delicious, delicious beef tallow in 1990 after outcry from vegetarians who were deceived into thinking they were animal-free.

It could not be confirmed by press time whether the new £5 note is delicious.