Robot Taste Food Cook
University of Cambridge researchers have managed to train a robot to taste the saltiness of food as it cooks. They first taught the robot to imitate the human process of chewing and tasting before it carried out the taste test on 9 varieties of scrambled eggs and tomatoes. This happened during three different stages of chewing, and it produced multiple visual ‘taste maps’ of the dish as it cooked.



Researchers equipped the robot with a conductance probe, which served as a salinity sensor, to imitate the human sense of taste. As it prepared the meal, the number of tomatoes and level of salt were altered before using the probe to ‘taste’ the dish throughout. Now imitating the change in texture caused by chewing required the egg to be put into a blender and then ‘tasted’ again by the robot with the probe.

GreenLife 3-in-1 Breakfast Maker Station, Healthy Ceramic Nonstick Dual Griddles for Eggs Meat Sausage...
  • HEALTHY CERAMIC NONSTICK: Our coating is specially designed for optimal nonstick performance on kitchen electrics and is free of PFAS, PFOA, lead, and...
  • 3-IN-1 DESIGN: With two upper griddle compartments and a handy toast drawer, you can create full breakfast feasts all in one place.
  • DUAL GRIDDLE COMPARTMENTS: Cook two things at a time: eggs and veggies, pancakes and bacon, potatoes and French toast, the options are endless.

Most home cooks will be familiar with the concept of tasting as you go – checking a dish throughout the cooking process to check whether the balance of flavors is right. If robots are to be used for certain aspects of food preparation, it’s important that they are able to ‘taste’ what they’re cooking,” said Grzegorz Sochacki from Cambridge’s Department of Engineering.

Author

A technology, gadget and video game enthusiast that loves covering the latest industry news. Favorite trade show? Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.