The Smart Gastronomy Lab Pushes the Boundaries of 3D Printed Food

RAPID

Share this Article

Smart-Gastronomy-Lab-photo-Quanah-ZimmermanFollowing their support of the first International Conference on Food 3D Printing, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech and the Smart Gastronomy Lab at the University of Liège say the 3D printer may well be the “microwave of tomorrow.”

The full vision includes a day when hungry people download recipes with a smartphone and then print their way through a a menu via their dedicated food 3D printer in their own kitchens.

“3D Printing Food is an opportunity to develop new ingredients, such as insects and algae, which are not very appetizing but have a clear nutritional interest because of their important protein intake and their abundant production,” says Dorothée Goffin of the Smart Gastronomy Lab. “They can be printed in 3D with new shapes and textures that resemble the products that we already know. “

smart_gastronomyGoffin’s SGL in Belgium is packed with 3D printers, digital milling machines and more common kitchen equipment, and the goal is to bring together a rotating team of technicians, chefs and the random curious and hungry visitor to examine and direct the future of 3D printed food.

The Living Lab Smart Gastronomy Lab is a “co-creation and prototyping laboratory which catalyzed culinary and technologic experimentation.” Goffin says the key to the concept is that it “puts the user in the center of the concept, including him in the creative, prototyping and test phases.”

The project is part of a multidisciplinary consortium which includes the Gembloux Agro-Bio-Tech, the Bureau économique de la Province de Namur, the KIKK – a non-profit organization to promote digital and creative cultures, art, science and technology and Génération W, another non-profit organization. The groups say their goal is to form a “multidisciplinary approach to allow building the food of tomorrow.”

Goffin is the director of SGL, and she says it’s all about making 3D printed food a palatable alternative to a generally suspicious public. She says the end product will be foods that, though they sport nutritional upgrades, are actually attractive and edible.SGL

“We will cook again like our grandmothers did, but using new technologies,” Goffin said during a (French language) TEDx talk on the subject.

While the current materials available tend toward Belgian chocolate and other liquid concoctions, companies such as pasta maker Barilla are applying the technology and Hershey is focusing on commercial applications for their proprietary chocolate printer.

smartgastronomylabAccording to Goffin, the major problems with 3D printing food are sidestepped with materials like chocolate and pasta. In regard to chocolate, a high fat content lets the material congeal at room temperature and makes it ideal for current printing methods (and, Goffin notes, they started with chocolate “because we are Belgian”). But she says it’s techniques like actually cooking and heating meats and vegetables as they’re extruded that will drive 3D printed gastronomy forward.

There are plans for the Smart Gastronomy Lab to combine a laboratory space with a working restaurant capable of polling consumers on their reactions to various experimental recipes which push the boundaries of form and texture. Some 20 notable Belgian chefs have already signed on to take part in the project, and the teams will work with everything from micro-proteins to odd ingredients like insect proteins and algae compounds.

“That’s the idea of the Living Lab: to test the reaction of people in their real life,” Goffin says of the project. “If you are working only on nutrition, you do something like Soylent. That’s nutrition. But food is pleasure. It’s something very personal. 3D printing will allow us to reconstitute food, and in doing so restore the pleasure of eating.”

One of the many benefits Goffin mentions specifically is the use of 3D printing for food for the aging population. Eating purees may not be appealing, but through 3D printing, food could seem more like food than mush.

Have you ever tasted 3D printed food? What are your hopes for its future? Let us know in the 3D Printed Food forum thread on 3DPB.com.B_K0HKCUwAA8Wp1

 

Share this Article


Recent News

Europe’s New Rocket Set to Launch Polymer 3D Printing Technology into Space

Senators King and Collins Advocate 3D Printing Adoption for Department of Defense



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

World’s Largest Polymer 3D Printer Unveiled by UMaine: Houses, Tools, Boats to Come

The University of Maine has once again broken its own record by unveiling the largest polymer 3D printer in the world. Surpassing its 2019 achievement, the new Factory of the...

Featured

Changing the Landscape: 1Print Co-Founder Adam Friedman on His Unique Approach to 3D Printed Construction

Additive construction (AC) is much more versatile than it seems, at first: as natural as it is to focus on the exciting prospect of automated home construction, there’s far more...

Featured

US Army Corps of Engineers’ Megan Kreiger on the State of Construction 3D Printing

Despite last year’s gloomy reports about the financial state of the additive manufacturing (AM) industry, there’s no doubt that we’re actually witnessing the birth of a sector rather than its...

Featured

Profiling a Construction 3D Printing Pioneer: US Army Corps of Engineers’ Megan Kreiger

The world of construction 3D printing is still so new that the true experts can probably be counted on two hands. Among them is Megan Kreiger, Portfolio Manager of Additive...