Impossible Foods just lived up to its name – by converting one of NYC’s most meat-crazy chefs to its bloody plant-based burger.

We’re not being rude. The burger, which literally bleeds, will hop onto the menu at David Chang’s Momofuku Nishi today, Eater reports. It’ll clock in at an affordable — for New York, anyway — $12, and will be served on a Martin roll, topped with romaine, beefsteak tomato, pickles, and cheese upon request. Shoestring fries tag along, too.

Help Grist raise $25,000 by September 30 to further advance our climate reporting

Chang told Eater that he was “genuinely blown away” by the burger. High praise, coming from the guy who’s made a living off selling ample portions of flesh.

This is the most high-tech veggie burger you can order at a restaurant. Impossible Foods’ competition, Beyond Burgers, is currently only available at grocery stores.

Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one.

The patty is made from a benign-enough ingredient cocktail that includes wheat, coconut oil, and potato protein. But the magic comes from heme, a molecule that gives meat its distinctive flavor and texture. And bloodiness. Don’t despair, vegetarians: Some plants, such as legumes, have the molecule too, in smaller doses. That’s where Impossible Foods CEO Patrick Brown extracts the heme for his burgers.

If Brown — and Chang — manage to make plant-based burgers mainstream, it’ll potentially be a huge win for the climate. But that begs the question — will mainstream meat lovers actually go for a meat-free patty? Who knows. Anything goes in the food world.