Aerospace and Mechanical Insider on MSN

How 3D printing is reshaping the future of food

Over the past decade, additive manufacturing has moved from niche prototyping into a multi-industry force, driven by falling ...
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Standard military rations are made in bulk, formulated to provide a complete packaged meal during field operations. But sometimes, soldiers need a specific nutritional fix to maintain peak performance ...
She’s 18 now and hasn’t visited her aunt for several years. But like her aunt, she has a strong interest in cooking. Going into the kitchen, she’s pleased to see that her aunt has kept up with the ...
Would you eat food that was printed by a machine? 3D printed food is built up by equipment (a 3D food printer), layer after layer, using edible pastes, dough and food slurries in three-dimensional ...
A company called Natural Machines has come up with a 3D printer called Foodini, which, like the "Star Trek" replicator, creates edible shapes layer by layer. Picture Enterprise Captain Picard ordering ...
What if, instead of trays of gooey pizza and wilted lettuce, the school cafeteria cranked out plates of food that were synced to your body’s nutritional needs for optimum performance for the rest of ...
Steakholder Foods’ plant-based, 3D-printed ‘steak’. Credit: Steakholder Foods The food industry has been contemplating how 3D printing technology might shape product development and consumption for ...
The Star Trek food replicator it's not. But researchers at Columbia University in New York have created a 3D printer that makes cheesecake. Until now, most 3D-printed foods have been made with ...