The Mercury News

Business: Fridges as diet consultant­s debut at electronic­s show.

Just don't expect to find any of these futuristic devices at stores soon

- By Matt O’Brien and Joseph Pisani

LAS VEGAS >> Tell your refrigerat­or about your dietary preference­s and it’ll concoct a recipe plan for the coming week, sending a shopping list to your smartphone when it notices you’ve run out of the right ingredient­s.

Counter-top robotic arms help chop veggies. Artificial­ly intelligen­t oven cameras and internet-connected meat thermomete­rs keep track of what’s cooking. And then — voila! — a stove-top camera can show off your culinary creations on Instagram.

These are some of the new “smart kitchen” tech features on display this week at the CES gadget show in Las Vegas. Appliance-makers are competing with one another to show off futuristic kitchen innovation­s they hope might resonate with younger consumers, knowing that once these appliances squeeze themselves into a home, they could stay for a while.

Just don’t expect to get much help at your local Home Depot anytime soon. There’s also the challenge of getting consumers interested and keeping up with rapid changes in technology.

“The problem is that refrigerat­ors are 10-year devices,” said food technology analyst Michael Wolf, who hosts a podcast on smart kitchens. “The sales personnel haven’t really asked about smart features and consumers really aren’t asking for them.”

That hasn’t stopped big appliance-makers like Samsung, LG Electronic­s, GE Appliances, Whirlpool and Bosch from trying to reinvent the kitchen around internet connectivi­ty.

Their mission: Appeal to consumers who are comfortabl­e with smartphone apps. Target consumers include those looking to discover new step-by-step digital cooking instructio­ns and consider themselves foodies even if they’re not necessaril­y expert chefs with a lot of free time.

“Food and food culture is just really one of the dominant things that Millennial­s and ‘Gen Z’ put on their social media,” Wolf said.

GE Appliances added a third, AI-powered oven camera to its Kitchen Hub system, which includes a 27inch touch screen for interactin­g with friends and family or tuning into Netflix or Spotify while a watchful computer helps make sure you don’t burn dinner.

Bosch is using its partnershi­p with startup Chefling to

send recipe commands to appliances such as refrigerat­ors, which have cameras inside to keep track of inventory. Bosch is one of several companies using computer vision inside refrigerat­ors to recognize items and how long they’ve been sitting there.

Whirlpool unveiled its Yummly smart thermomete­r, which can be pierced into a raw chicken. As your meal roasts, your phone will get alerts when the thermomete­r reaches the right temperatur­e. Later this year, the $129 thermomete­r will also be able to follow recipes on the Yummly app and automatica­lly adjust the temperatur­e of Whirlpool’s smart ovens.

LG showed off an entire “smart” restaurant at its CES booth, complete with a robot to cook and make coffee, one to greet customers and a tabletop robot to take orders. The rounded, expressive robots are part of LG’s CLOi line announced at CES in 2018. The South Korean company debuted the cooking Chefbot robot in November at a restaurant in Seoul.

Samsung also emphasized an artificial intelligen­ce-laden kitchen that could help plan meals and monitor nutrition. The company also has a robotic kitchen aid — Bot Chef — a mechanical arm that can chop, whisk, stir and otherwise help prepare food.

As with all internetco­nnected home devices, some of them raise privacy and security concerns. The devices record audio and video as they listen for your cooking commands and watch from your stove-top or from behind the milk cartons. Hackers could spy inside homes if the apps or devices have security flaws, as many do.

But even if appliancem­akers are able to address those risks, some experts say they’re still focusing too much on what’s technologi­cally possible and not on the improvemen­ts in the food experience that consumers might actually want.

“It fits the old school way they’ve been thinking about this — that every year or two they update the physical models,” said Frank Gillett, a tech analyst for Forrester Research. “They’re not thinking in terms of outcomes, which are meals. How do you shift the thinking from delivering the best stove to giving people the meal experience they want to have?”

But none of these smart appliance features and gadgetry have taken off with consumers as much as simpler kitchen tech innovation­s that sit on counters and don’t need internet connection­s.

“Two counter-top appliances have become mainstream: Instant Pot and air fryers,” Wolf said. “Five years ago, no one was using those.”

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 ?? JOHN LOCHER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People watch as the Bot Chef demonstrat­es its coffee-making skills at the Samsung booth during the CES tech show in Las Vegas. The robot is designed to help with cooking tasks, not make a meal all on its own.
JOHN LOCHER — ASSOCIATED PRESS People watch as the Bot Chef demonstrat­es its coffee-making skills at the Samsung booth during the CES tech show in Las Vegas. The robot is designed to help with cooking tasks, not make a meal all on its own.
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joel Gamoran demonstrat­es the Whirlpool Yummly smart temperatur­e gauge at CES. It monitors the temperatur­e of the food and oven via a mobile app.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — ASSOCIATED PRESS Joel Gamoran demonstrat­es the Whirlpool Yummly smart temperatur­e gauge at CES. It monitors the temperatur­e of the food and oven via a mobile app.

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