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CES serves a taste of food technology

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From an AI oven that promises to warn you when your food is about to burn to a mixing bowl designed to take the hassle out of tracking calories, food tech was a key theme at this year’s CES tech show in Las Vegas.

Brad Jashinsky, a director analyst at research firm Gartner, said big companies often use CES to make attention-seeking announceme­nts about products that are out of reach for most consumers, but may become more widespread and affordable in the coming years.

Samsung’s bespoke AI oven comes with a camera inside that it says can warn you when your food is about to burn. It’s available in Europe but not yet North America, where a price has not been announced.

Also on display was

tech aimed at the food industry. Yo-Kai Express, creator of an autonomous restaurant that can quickly make ramen 24-7, offered a scaled-down version for small retailers and coworking spaces. Several startups showed tech that could help restaurant­s and

others reduce food waste and improve supply chains, which Jashinsky said could have a huge impact on their bottom lines.

For those who want to become better home cooks, there was plenty of tech aimed at mostly affluent consumers.

Here are some products that caught our eye:

Easier nutrition tracking

VersaWare is designed for people frustrated by trying to track their nutrition in traditiona­l apps.

It provides a cutting board and a mixing bowl, each attached to a phonesized device that will display recipes and other informatio­n. As you cook, you note what ingredient you’re adding and it weighs it and calculates the nutritiona­l informatio­n. At the end, you have the statistics for whatever you’re making without having to do the math yourself.

The appliances will sync to the company’s app, which will include recipes automatica­lly tailored to your nutritiona­l goals — you’ll need to decide how comfortabl­e you are shar

ing that informatio­n. For example, if your nutrition plan means a recipe should have 25% less calories, VersaWare says its AI can figure out how to get it there.

“We’re trying to shoulder the burden of nutrition tracking,” said CEO Jacob Lindberg.

The company is still raising money and hopes to launch in the third quarter of 2023. They haven’t determined pricing. The cutting board and mixing bowl will be sold separately.

Reducing food waste

Knowing exactly when an avocado is perfectly ripe may sound a bit niche, but Dutch startup OneThird thinks it’s a key to helping reduce food waste.

The company unveiled an avocado scanner designed for supermarke­ts that’s currently being tested in Canada and can tell you whether an avocado is still firm or ready to eat.

OneThird already works with growers, distributo­rs and others along the supply chain to predict the shelf life of avocados, tomatoes, strawberri­es and blueberrie­s and is working to add more produce.

According to the United Nations, nearly a third of food of all food globally is thrown away. Reducing that would mean less food waste being tossed into methane-producing landfills.

Another Dutch startup, Orbisk, helps restaurant­s reduce food waste by tracking where and when it’s happening.

Interactiv­e cooking classes

Blok wants to be the

Peloton of cooking classes.

It’s a large cutting board with a docking station and a digital display where subscriber­s will be able to watch live cooking classes taught by profession­al chefs and chat with other participan­ts.

Creators Alissa and Tony Frick envision groups of family members and friends doing classes together virtually four or five times a month. The classes will all be 30 minutes or less.

The idea was born during the pandemic, when the Fricks couldn’t get together to cook meals with their family.

“We missed that so much,” Tony Frick said.

The Fricks have sold 100 units that will be delivered this summer and are hoping to scale up production after that. They anticipate selling the cutting board 33%.

It means future sways by Meta and other suddenly beaten-down techorient­ed stocks won’t carry as much weight for S&P 500 index funds as

for $299 or $399, with an app subscripti­on expected to cost $9.99 a month.

Uncertaint­y-free cooking

Some people love to experiment in the kitchen. If you’re not one of them, there’s the Tramontina Guru.

The Brazilian company’s smart induction cooktop promises to help you make perfect risotto, steak au poivre and caramel toffee, among 200 other recipes.

An app guides you through every step of the cooking process. You can even choose whether you’d like to your meat to be rare, medium or well-done.

You weigh your ingredient­s in the pot on the cooktop. When you’re ready, you press a button and the cooktop heats to the right temperatur­e for the right amount of time.

“This takes out the

they used to. Tesla, for example, today makes up 0.9% of the S&P 500. That’s less than half its weight in the autumn of 2021, when it was 2.3% of the index.

Big Tech’s fall is mostly a result of the blitzkrieg of hikes to interest rates the Federal Reserve has pushed through since early last year to get inflation under control.

guesswork,” said Tramontina, head chef Flavia Gois.

The basic set including an induction cooktop and pot will be available in the U.S. this spring for $299.

A very smart mixer

GE Profile unveiled a smart mixer that lets you weigh your ingredient­s in the bowl while you’re working.

The mixer also has an auto sensor that can monitor changes in texture and viscosity and adjust speed accordingl­y. It shuts itself off automatica­lly to avoid overmixing.

And it has voice control so you don’t have to stop what you’re doing and wash your hands off to operate it.

All that precision doesn’t come cheap — the mixer costs $999.95 and is only available at Crate & Barrel.

Tech stocks were some of the biggest beneficiar­ies earlier when the Fed was cutting rates to a record low of nearly zero in order to prop up the economy amid the pandemic. But the surges for their stock prices left them looking more expensive and more vulnerable than other stocks to rising rates.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The Tramontina Guru cook system is on display at the Tramontina booth booth during the CES tech show on Jan. 5 in Las Vegas.
Associated Press The Tramontina Guru cook system is on display at the Tramontina booth booth during the CES tech show on Jan. 5 in Las Vegas.
 ?? Associated Press ?? An exhibitor demonstrat­es the OneThird avocado ripeness checker during CES Unveiled before the start of the CES tech show in Las Vegas. The device is designed for use by grocery store shoppers to scan an avocado and get informatio­n about when it is ready to eat.
Associated Press An exhibitor demonstrat­es the OneThird avocado ripeness checker during CES Unveiled before the start of the CES tech show in Las Vegas. The device is designed for use by grocery store shoppers to scan an avocado and get informatio­n about when it is ready to eat.

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