The Genie, similar in size and appearance to a coffee maker, can
produce an unlimited variety of meals using pods, that contain
natural dehydrated ingredients. So whether salty or sweet, an
appetizer or a dessert, the device can create the food you crave in
30 seconds.
Developed by Israeli entrepreneurs Ayelet Carasso and Doron Marco
from White Innovation company, the device uses a mobile app to
operate.
"The dish can be anything, it can be a meal like chicken with rice,
like couscous with vegetable or an amazing Ramen or even a chocolate
soufflé or any other desert that you want," Carasso explains.
"We're using only natural ingredients, we're not using any
preservatives or anything that people add to their meals," she
added.
Meals are prepared in 140 gram portions in recyclable container.
At the push of a button on Genie's mobile application, the device
begins mixing, shaking and adding any required liquids from tubes
attached to the back of the compact machine which bakes or cooks the
desired dish at the appropriate temperature.
The all-natural ingredients in the pods are freeze-dried and have a
shelf-life of between one and two years.
Carasso and Marco conceived of the patent-registered device and
pods, when they struggled to find restaurants that delivered to
their office during a late night working session.
They describe the idea as a real life version of Star Trek's
'replicator', a device used to synthesize meals on demand, on board
the mythical starship.
While the team don't expect the Genie to replace dining out, they
say it will challenge chefs to produce a good meal in a pod, or
small container.
Israeli chefs have already begun producing new recipes for Genie's
pods and hope to develop product lines for well known culinary
personalities as well as pods for specific dietary requirements,
including sugar and gluten free.
The team say they are already working on expanding the capabilities
of the mobile application and expect that in the future, Genie will
cater to individual users.
"Eventually, Genie will know your microbiome and will prepare the
pod for you, just for you and you will eat better, even tastier and
healthier," said 47-year-old Marco.
White Innovation, a privately owned company, hopes to first move
into convenience stores and cafes and later sell the appliance to
individual consumers.
Marco said Genie is only the first step in the evolution of food
technology and he believes the getting a meal in a pill will be
available in the not too distant future.
While Genie's target population is primarily in western countries,
Marco and Carasso say they designed the device with the hopes that
it could day help those in countries that don't have enough food
too.
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"In our world, we are getting fat and we are throwing away a lot of
food, in their world, they don't have any food. So if you use Genie,
you can distribute the food better, you can have the shelf life much
longer without the preservatives, give the people better food for
them," said Marco.
"We can even the food distribution in the world. That's a very, very
important goal for us," he added.
Marco said they are also holding talks with the Israeli military
where Genie's pods could produce fresh, nutritious meals on demand
for ground forces or aboard ships at sea.
At a tasting at Louise cafe in Ramat Hashron, in central Israel, the
kitchen staff were pleasantly surprised by Genie's chocolate
soufflé.
"It's really nice, it's chocolatey, it's smooth, it's creamy, it's
nice ... surprising actually coming from there," said Tal, Louise
cafe's chef.
Yossi Orbach, co-owner of Louise cafe, who recently became Genie's
sole distributor in Israel, said Genie can offer restaurant and cafe
owners a way to increase the narrow profit margins they make due to
the fact that 30 percent of ingredients used in their kitchens go to
waste. The meals can be prepared on demand and the size of the
portions greatly limit waste.
"In a way there is a full menu," Orbach said. "It gives me an option
to do, actually, whatever I want without any preparing," he added.
The Genie is expected to cost several hundred U.S. dollars. The team
say the pods will be priced so they are comparable to a meal, snack
or dessert.
With a string of local distributors and sales underway in Europe,
Greece and the United States, Marco and Carasso say mass production
will begin sooner than they expected.
It appears that Star Trek's replicator may not have been such a
far-fetched idea after all.
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