You knew this was coming ...
3D Printable FOOD!http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/01/printing-food-with-3d-printers/http://www.gizmag.com/cornucopia-digital-gastronomy-3d-food-printer/13873/EXCERPT:
Cornucopia: Digital Gastronomy - could 3D
printing be the next revolution in cooking?Wouldn't it be great to have a digital food machine sitting in your kitchen that could create any dish, real or imagined, from scratch at the touch of a button? Cornucopia: Digital Gastronomy is a concept design that uses the well-established principles of 3D printing - plus precisely timed and temperature-controlled mixing and cooking - to open the door to a virtually limitless realm of replicable, creative cuisine in shapes and combinations that are simply impossible using our current, centuries-old cooking techniques. It's a wonderful look into the future of cooking, from the creative food lover's perspective.
We see all sorts of home gadgetry here at Gizmag, but I think it's fair to say that there hasn't been a truly revolutionary invention in the world of cooking since the microwave oven - and those started popping up in homes more than 40 years ago. Otherwise, we're still frying, casseroling, baking, pressure cooking, roasting, barbecuing, steaming and grilling our dinners in much the same way as we have done for hundreds of years.
For many, the simple and precise application of heat, fire, metal and various different ingredients has become a fine art - but surely we're overdue for a technological overhaul in the kitchen that might open up some new possibilities.
The Cornucopia: Digital Gastronomy concept design is an ingenious attempt to turn the cooking process upside down, open up a whole range of new creative possibilities and bring creative cooking into a new and replicable phase for the information age.
Cornucopia builds up edible creations using a layering process similar to some of the 3D printing machines we've been writing about recently, except that it uses a variety of different foodstuffs instead of plastics to build up its final product.