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Science
3-D printed food could change how we eat
2018-05-02
The problem is the area of what we don’t know that we don’t know, which could lead to interesting diseases because of missing micronutrients, just as now all sorts of health conditions are improved by megadoses of vitamin D —or just sitting in the sun with bare arms and legs for twenty minutes in the middle of the day. I’ll stick with real food, thanks.
[SpaceDaily] Imagine a home appliance that, at the push of a button, turns powdered ingredients into food that meets the individual nutrition requirements of each household member. Although it may seem like something from science fiction, new research aimed at using 3-D printing to create customized food could one day make this a reality.

Jin-Kyu Rhee, associate professor at Ewha Womans University in South Korea, will discuss his new research and the potential of 3-D printing technology for food production at the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology annual meeting during the 2018 Experimental Biology meeting to be held April 21-25 in San Diego.

"We built a platform that uses 3-D printing to create food microstructures that allow food texture and body absorption to be customized on a personal level," said Rhee. "We think that one day, people could have cartridges that contain powdered versions of various ingredients that would be put together using 3-D printing and cooked according to the user's needs or preferences."

3-D printing of food works much like 3-D printing of other materials in that layers of raw material are deposited to build up a final product. In addition to offering customized food options, the ability to 3-D print food at home or on an industrial scale could greatly reduce food waste and the cost involved with storage and transportation. It might also help meet the rapidly increasing food needs of a growing world population.

For the new study, the researchers used a prototype 3-D printer to create food with microstructures that replicated the physical properties and nanoscale texture they observed in actual food samples. They also demonstrated that their platform and optimized methods can turn carbohydrate and protein powers into food with microstructures that can be tuned to control food texture and how the food is absorbed by the body.

"We are only in early stages, but we believe our research will move 3-D food printing to the next level," said Rhee. "We are continuing to optimize our 3-D print technology to create customized food materials and products that exhibit longer storage times and enhanced functionality in terms of body absorption."

Posted by:746

#6  If we get nuked or the power goes out for a few years, I suspect the need to feed people will get drastically smaller than at present. Dead people don't eat.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2018-05-02 18:03  

#5  OK, so suppose we switch over to chemical food. Suppose we get nuked or the power gets knocked out. What then? I prefer society's food to be walking around and pulled out of the ground until these risks are solved.
Posted by: gorb   2018-05-02 15:33  

#4  Decades ago I read a very old medical article from Britain about an outbreak of vitamin B12 deficiency among vegetarian Hindu immigrants, who were well to do. In the UK they were eating the same kinds of foods they ate at home, so the investigation delved into the differences between things like rice in the UK and rice in India. Conclusion was that the feces of rodents was commonly mixed in with Indian rice, supplying a previously unknown Vit B12 source in a diet that otherwise was free of B12 altogether. UK rice was not so contaminated.
There are ingredients labels, and then there are the REAL ingredients.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2018-05-02 12:43  

#3   I’ll stick with real food, thanks

Good luck, TW. And don't read the ingredients label on about 90% of food these days
Posted by: ar anonymous   2018-05-02 08:51  

#2  You f*cking eat it!
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2018-05-02 04:43  

#1  3D printed meals and soylent
Posted by: 3dc   2018-05-02 00:33  

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