My dear friends, here comes the food making machine or should I call it the Lazy Producing Machine? From what I have learnt this machine cooks or according to them prints the food you sabi oyibo and their grammer.
Anyways you feed the machine with the necessary ingredients for the dish then press the corresponding button for the food you want, example if you want fried rice you put the fried rice ingredients and press fried rice button shd viola there goes your fried for consumption. Enough of my gist read it for yourself.
"The "Foodini," as it's called, isn't too different from a regular 3D printer,
but instead of printing with plastics, it deploys edible ingredients squeezed out of stainless steel capsules: "It's the same technology," says Lynette Kucsma, co-founder of Natural Machines, "but with plastics there's just one melting point, whereas with food it's different temperatures, consistencies and textures. Also, gravity works a little bit against us, as food doesn't hold the shape as well as plastic."
In essence, this is a mini food manufacturing plant shrunk down to the size of an oven.
Lynette Kucsma, co-founder of Natural Machines
"In essence, this is a mini food manufacturing plant shrunk down to the size of an oven," Kucsma said, pointing out that at least in the initial stage the printer will be targeted mostly at professional kitchen users, with a consumer version to follow, at a projected retail price of around $1,000.
In principle, the Foodini sounds like the ultimate laziness aid: press a button to print your ravioli. But Natural Machines is quick to point out that it's designed to take care only of the difficult and time-consuming parts of food preparation that discourage people from cooking at home, and that it promotes healthy eating by requiring fresh ingredients prepared before printing.
Nevertheless, the company is working with major food manufacturers to create pre-packaged plastic capsules that can just be loaded into the machine to make food, even though they assure these will be free of preservatives, with a shelf life limited to five days.
"There's a touchscreen on the front that connects to a recipe site in the cloud, so it's an internet-of-things, connected kitchen appliance," said Kucsma. Users will also be able to control the device remotely using a smartphone, and share their recipes with the community.
That is, if people don't balk at the idea of eating printed food. "We have done tests and everybody liked the food," explains Kucsma. "Take the microwave oven, for example: in the 70s, people were a bit fearful about it, they thought food could be poisoned with radiation or something, but fast forward 30 years, and there's one in every household. This is real food, with real fresh ingredients, it's just prepared using a new technology."
I certainly would wanna have this :D doesn't am lazy ooo, or if person give you, you no go collect?
Source: CNN
Follow Us
| | Maryann Blog |
| | maryann3n |
| | maryann3n |




Post a Comment
PLACE YOUR COMMENT IN THE COMMENT BOX