The ultimate iron chef - when 3D printers invade the kitchen

Similar documents
A violent debate: could guns be made at home by 3D printers?

Additive Manufacturing Workshop. EPSRC Centre for EPSRC Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Food, Nottingham. Workshop Report

HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION FOOD TECHNOLOGY 2/3 UNIT (COMMON) Time allowed Three hours (Plus 5 minutes reading time)

Intelligent food production. Emilia Nordlund & Mirva Lampinen

3D Printing Primer. An Introduction to Additive Manufacturing

European Commission. 6 th Framework Programme Anticipating scientific and technological needs NEST. New and Emerging Science and Technology

The third dimension. This article is supported by...

AG Interview with Brandon Scott Utley. Date and Time: 17 July 2007, 3:40 p.m.

Once upon a time, when Australia had a steel industry

Emerging biotechnologies. Nuffield Council on Bioethics Response from The Royal Academy of Engineering

Horizon 2020 Project: FENIX (No: ) Type of action: RIA. To be supplied to I3DU

Characterizing the Variety of Developments Under the Umbrella of 3D Printing

Relationship initiation between universities and manufacturing: a new perspective

Copyright 2017 WYGANT PRODUCTIONS, INC. All Rights Reserved. May be shared with copyright and credit left intact. DAVIDWYGANT.COM

Martian Masterchef. The World Around Us. ICLs: Where I Live Needs and Wants Year 6/7

CREATE PROJECT Edit Printer. Tutorial_V2 - Updated: 13,0600,1489,1629(SP6)

Case study in academic and industry collaboration: the development of an adolescent targeted sun protection intervention in NSW

FOOD LITERACY ATTITUDE AND AWARENESS RESEARCH REPORT

Let s Eat (Right)! ACtivity One. SetUp: 1. Ask a student to pull the top card (card A) from Bag 1, show

News Release. 3D Systems Corporation 333 Three D Systems Circle Rock Hill, SC NYSE: DDD

1.8.3 Haptic-Based CAD 1.9 About this Book 1.10 Exercises References Development of Additive Manufacturing Technology

WCImpact Center of Influence Script

Holden to cease making cars in Australia by 2017: experts react

Professor Aljosa Smolic SFI Research Professor of Creative Technologies

TRANSFORMING DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY INTO OPPORTUNITY MARKET PLACE CHANGE & THE COOPERATIVE

Transcription for Dr. Jon Connelly

Banning Garrett, PhD

GRABCAD PRINT HOW SOFTWARE AND THE CLOUD ARE REVOLUTIONIZING 3D PRINTING

A Healthier You SET S.M.A.R.T. GOALS

Laura Lindsey West Professor of Sculpture Fresno City College

Coal was king of the Industrial Revolution, but not always the path to a modern economy

RECENT TRENDS IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING

3D Bio printing. Nazrawit Mekonnen IT /29/15. "By placing this statement on my webpage, I certify that I have read and understand the GMU

ENGAGE ENLIGHTEN EMPOWER

Characteristics of power quality disturbances in Australia: voltage harmonics

Phase 2 (Thur -Sun) Time to Go Wild

Tool: Situational Eating - Card Sort and Food Choice Schema Interview Guide

Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age

Vermeulen, Niki. Plant Elicitors as Bio-Objects. Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 5, no. 8 (2016): 1-4.

Force and Extrusion in the Food Industry

Chapter: Science, Technology, and Society

Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age

Discovering values anew Exposure visits for decision-makers

3D PRINTING IS POISED TO CHANGE YOUR BUSINESS: ARE YOU READY?

Do You Want To Know Why You Struggle With Your Health And Your Relationship With Food?

Breakthrough Innovation The real Innovator s Dilemma

7th Grade Family and Consumer Science Family and Consumer Science

we the curious is a space

TRANSFORMING DISRUPTIVE TECHNOLOGY INTO OPPORTUNITY INNOVATION AT THE EXECUTIVE AND BOARD LEVEL

Jayaprakash Sivasamy & Shekappa Bandi Professional Assistant, IIM Ahmedabad

The 8 step plan to build a digital culture. Martin Talks

Complex Precision Machined Components and Assemblies for the Semiconductor Equipment, Medical Device and Aerospace Industries

Connecting museum collections and creator communities: The Virtual Museum of the Pacific project

PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENT. New Jersey Institute of Technology. MSPhM Systems Engineering. Newark. Fall 2008

AUSTRALIAN STEINER CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK

Food & Eating. About how many different color foods did you eat for dinner last night? Do you think about color when you are preparing a meal?

Without further ado, here are some tips I ve cooked up over the past couple of years that I ve been told have been really helpful, enjoy!

STATISTICAL THINKING IN THE KITCHEN: SAMPLES, POPULATIONS, SAMPLE SIZE, AND REPRESENTATIVENESS 1

Xcentric Mold and Engineering is a provider of custom injection molding, CNC machining, and 3D printing services headquartered in Clinton Township,

DOUGH CREATURE. Can you build a creature from scratch?

USTGlobal. 3D Printing. Changing the Face of Healthcare

Agriculture and Nutrition Global Learning and Evidence Exchange (AgN-GLEE)

On Demand Package Production for Rigid and Flexible Substrates

TrackingPoint bolt-action rifles are game-changers, not a game

Academic Program IIT Rajasthan

the state of 3D PRINTING

A u s t r a l i a n C r e at i v e - I n s p i r at i o n f o r C r e at i v e P r o f e s s i o n a l s SOUND & MUSIC ISSUE

New Horizons. A new paradigm. of collaborative research

Off. You've met our contestants and heard their stories. Now let's see if

Getting Value From Research:

ULTIMATE GUIDE T O G I V I N G U P S W E E T S F O R G O O D B Y S H E L P O W E R S

Emerging ingredients and impact on product innovation

ATLANT. media group. Catalogue Spring 2018 atlantmediagroup.com

Menu Planning Made Easy

Twiny paves your way to success...

H2020 Theme Oriented Training on ICT. H2020 Overview. Thies Wittig. Deputy Team Leader Project "Turkey in Horizon 2020"

As a Patent and Trademark Resource Center (PTRC), the Pennsylvania State University Libraries has a mission to support both our students and the

Abstract- Light Kite. things, finding resources and using them for our own use.

The Shape of Things to Come Strategies for Success in the Age of 3D Printing. Husch Blackwell LLP

Opening Speech by Commissioner Phil Hogan at EU Conference

Teaching Digital Histology

Technology and Data of the Living Environments Laboratory

POLICY BRIEF. Defense innovation requires strong leadership coupled with a framework of

3D Printing Will Be Aid in Making The Future More Sustainable

New Manufacturing Opportunities 2 - Medical Engineering

MCGILL CENTRE FOR THE CONVERGENCE OF HEALTH AND ECONOMICS (MCCHE)

WEEK 3 BREAK THE CHAINS OF SELF SABOTAGE

Consultation on Horizon 2020 Science with and for Society Work Programme

CA-ICA-2. Students will demonstrate and practice correct sanitation as it relates to healthy living and the modern commercial kitchen

Become A Health Coach Certification. Pillar 2: TCM Skills Week 2. Pillar 2 Week 2 Video 4 1

Success Stories of Interdisciplinary Research and Development Worldwide

AUDIO TRANSCRIPT AI: THE NEW INGREDIENT FOR GROWTH

The Shape of Things to Come Strategies for Success in the Age of 3D Printing. Husch Blackwell LLP

Innovation Management & Technology Transfer Innovation Management & Technology Transfer

FRANKENTOY What do you get when you mix and match animal parts?

Future Fit Risk Engineering 2017 Global Risk Engineering Conference

Unable to Withstand the Forces of Change

Twenty-Thirty Health care Scenarios - exploring potential changes in health care in England over the next 20 years

Reputation enhanced by innovation - Call for proposals in module 3

HeliophysicsScience Centers

Transcription:

University of Wollongong Research Online Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers Australian Institute for Innovative Materials 2013 The ultimate iron chef - when 3D printers invade the kitchen Robert Gorkin III University of Wollongong, rgorkin@uow.edu.au Susan Dodds University of Tasmania, sdodds@uow.edu.au Publication Details Gorkin, R. & Dodds, S. (2013). The ultimate iron chef - when 3D printers invade the kitchen. The Conversation, 15 October 1-4. Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: research-pubs@uow.edu.au

The ultimate iron chef - when 3D printers invade the kitchen Abstract Printing food seems more like an idea based in Star Trek rather than in the average home. But recent advances in 3D printing (known formally as additive manufacturing) are driving the concept closer to reality. With everything from printed metal airplane wings to replacement organs on the horizon, could printed food be next? And how will we feel when it's served at the table? Keywords invade, printers, 3d, kitchen, when, ultimate, chef, iron Disciplines Engineering Physical Sciences and Mathematics Publication Details Gorkin, R. & Dodds, S. (2013). The ultimate iron chef - when 3D printers invade the kitchen. The Conversation, 15 October 1-4. This journal article is available at Research Online: http://ro.uow.edu.au/aiimpapers/1119

1 of 4 9/07/2014 10:30 AM 15 October 2013, 6.19am AEST AU T H O R S Robert Gorkin Research Fellow at University of Wollongong Susan Dodds Dean, Faculty of Arts and Professor of Philosophy at University of Tasmania Sweet! 3D printing with sugar. Windell Oskay Printing food seems more like an idea based in Star Trek rather than in the average home. But recent advances in 3D printing (known formally as additive manufacturing) are driving the concept closer to reality. With everything from printed metal airplane wings to replacement organs on the horizon, could printed food be next? And how will we feel when it s served at the table? From sundaes to space food In some ways we have printed food for decades. Think of making a sundae using a self-dispensing ice-cream machine. Building by extruding material through a nozzle is quite similar to how certain 3D printers, called fused deposition modellers (FDM) work today. While FDM is primarily used for prototyping plastics, the technology has been applied in culinary arts for years. Researchers at Cornell pioneered some of this work, adapting an open source extrusion printer, called the Fab@Home Lab, to work with food in 2007. They ve gone so far as partnering with the French Culinary Institute in Manhattan to print personalised chocolate and cheese, cookies, cubes of pureed turkey and celery paste, and even tiny spaceships made of deep fried scallops.

2 of 4 9/07/2014 10:30 AM Novelty food suppliers have become early adopters of similar technology. Various chocolate printers are on the market, and for Valentine s Day in Japan this year you could order chocolate made from a 3D scan of your face. Further examples include a Burritobot on Kickstarter last year and Google serving 3D printed pasta. Other 3D printing technologies have been investigated for use with food. In 2007, Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories introduced the CandyFab 4000, a DIY printer based on a modified selective laser sintering technique. The method utilised a focused heat source moving over a bed of sugar to fuse large 3D sugar sculptures. And just a few months ago, a team of students from the University of Waterloo was able to sinter chocolate using a custom built machine. Established market players in Additive Manufacturing have taken notice as well. In September, 3D Systems (NYSE:DDD) acquired The Sugar Lab, a startup producing edible 3D sugar confections. The Sugar Lab had adapted 3D Systems' Color Jet Printing (CJP) technology to print flavoured edible binders on a sugar bed to fabricate solid structures. The Sugar Lab Click to enlarge Beyond novelty, printed food could provide serious medical benefits. The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) announced they ll build printers to reassemble pureed food to look like the original - think 3D printed broccoli florets from pureed broccoli. TNO has targeted printers for nursing homes in order to help elderly people who have chewing and swallowing problems. Beyond medical conditions, TNO has proposed printing customised meals with varied levels of the basic food components like carbs, protein, and fat, for everyone from seniors, to athletes, to expectant mothers. And NASA sees 3D-printed food as a revolutionary way to make personalised meals for astronauts. They are funding development of a 3D printer that premixes basic food components before spraying the mix on baking tray. Their ultimate goal would be to print a pizza. Beyond providing cosmic delivery, food would also be tailored for astronauts' daily activities. The ethics of printed meat Will printed food go beyond novelty value? Should it replace other foods or supplement the nutritional value of existing foods? In this area, one of the most interesting and perhaps controversial areas is the debate about printing meat. Some suggest 3D printed meat could provide high quality protein for a growing global population without increasing stress on arable land or continually depleting the oceans. It could also answer the problem of methane emissions from agriculture. In 2011 Modern Meadow took up the challenge, setting out to make ecological and economical leather and meat from bioprinters. They cultured biopsied bovine cells to produce sheets of tissue, eventually forming either meat or hide. They predict cultured leather will be on the market in five years. Modern Meadow s CEO Andras Forgacs is a pioneer in the bioprinting field cofounding the tissue printing company Organovo (NYSE:ONVO) with his father Gabor Forgacs. In 2011, Gabor - the Chief Scientific Officer at Modern Meadow, cooked and ate cultured pork live at a

3 of 4 9/07/2014 10:30 AM TEDMED conference. Currently, it is very expensive to produce tiny volumes of printed meat, with estimates of thousands of dollars to make a pound of meat in the lab. But could the process be scaled up, and cell cultures made cheaper? Biopsies aren t the only sources for culture. The process could potentially use stem cells. Industrial scale printing of meat could additionally use cells grown in an algae-based cell culture and powered by novel processes such as photosynthesis-mimicking solar energy systems. In the lab with Fab@Home For vegetarians, printed meat somewhat circumvents concerns about harmful or destructive use of animals for food. Live animals are used only to provide cells from which cell lines can be grown (though the blood of unborn cows is needed to culture most cells). Ethical vegans may still object at the use of non-human animals for human purposes; while non-destructive, it is still exploitative. It isn t clear whether 3D printed meat is halal or kosher. There may not be an issue if there is no animal slaughter involved. Will we stomach it? While we typically eat with our eyes, and printed meat could be made in familiar shapes and textures, our palate will be the dominating factor. That is, if printed meat could be proven safe. Printed meat may result in a debate akin to that on GMO foods. Certainly the public will want to know whether printed foods are safe for human consumption. Consumers will most likely demand adequate protections to ensure the development of printed foods does not limit their access to or contaminate organic foods. It is reasonable to assume most will want to decide whether they eat real meat or try printed meats, so labelling regulation will be important. Farming communities and those in agricultural food production will also want a voice about if, when and how their industry will be transformed by industrialised printed meat. Early identification or those affected, and extensive engagement with the range of community concerns about printed foods, is warranted. While no specific printed food exploration exists yet, similar forms of community engagement have been developed in Australia through the Science and Technology Engagement Pathways framework (STEP). They work with communities on a wide range of issues, including synthetic biology and bionic implants.

4 of 4 9/07/2014 10:30 AM Finally, a way to print chocolate. STEP has supported researchers in the ethics program at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Electromaterials Science, who are identifying effective public engagement and deliberative democratic processes for uncovering and articulating community concerns about emerging technologies. Other entities like RiAus, an Australian non-profit, has been active in stimulating community debate specifically about synthetic meat. The proof is in the print With no slow-down in 3D printing developments, there will certainly be new advances in printed food. Whether the technology can truly move from the novelty sector will most likely depend on the ability to process a wider range of foods requiring influence from both the kitchen and from printer developers. It is also debatable whether 3D printed food can integrate in the global supply chain, particularly if printed meat can be made economically viable and if consumers will accept it. However, the benefits of 3D printed food could be monumental. Time will tell if the next fad will be the 3D printed diet. Until then, the community should be involved in the discussion of printed food.