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There will come a day when computers cook our supper.
A restaurant in Germany already has a fully computerised ordering and delivery system and this week Selfridges Food Hall welcomes Mr Asahi, a life-size robot who is able to speak English - an improvement on many of London's bar staff - while he opens bottles and pours free samples of Japanese beer.
Meanwhile, online food shopping and organic vegetable box delivery schemes are already second nature to many consumers. Thanks to faster broadband, internet shopping is growing at the fastest rate in six years. The number of online shoppers rose 24.7 per cent to 22.6 million last year and food and groceries top the virtual shopping basket, along with electrical goods.
Ingredients’ lists for a particular dish can be downloaded to a mobile phone in the supermarket aisle and video recipes followed on laptops in the kitchen. The latest in-car satellite-navigation system even steers hungry drivers to more than 3,000 places to eat in the UK recommended by Harden’s restaurant guides (£9.95; roadtour.co.uk).
Hands-free devices are, er, handy when you're driving, and ditto in the kitchen. Nintendo’s new kitchen gadget is a pocket-sized talking digital cookbook that guides users step-by-step through recipes. The Japanese-made gizmo contains 250 classic recipes from around the world searchable by country and by individual ingredients (useful for that ailing aubergine at the back of the fridge). It can make calculations to adjust portions and has a calorie counter.
Preparation tips and and the how-to videos, including filleting sardines by hand, cleaning rainbow trout and chopping onions, are basic but useful. Alas, there is no search by season and no wine-matching facility.
Touch the image of an aubergine on the screen and the device returns ten mainly summery recipes including Sicilian caponata, Japanese tempura and a simple Greek dip. But for broad beans there's a lone North African sesame and broad bean croquette, no entry for courgettes and the recipes for apricots, pineapples and cherries use tinned fruits.
The images and range of dishes are a bit old-school cookbook (chilli con carne made with Frankfurter sausages anyone?), lacking any of the gastropub flair that we have grown accustomed to in dishes this decade. And it's a bit fiddly to interact manually with the credit-card sized screen, especially when your hands are covered in fish innards.
On the other hand, the recipes originate from the Tsuji Cooking academy in Japan so the device is strong on Asian cuisine and condiments.
Verdict: don't consign your well thumbed copies of Jamie and Delia to the recycling bin just yet.
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i've been using Google for years for my recipes,uktv food,bbc food etc,millions of great recipes,just print the page and go-who needs a cook book these days-unless ur my mum,63!
lance baker, london, england
We have been using an old laptop in the kitchen for some time ,for recipes and have also scanned some very badly damaged cook books has well so we can still access the recipes and put the books in a saver place.
Clive, Dartford, Kent
The computer in the kitchen should be on the same lines as the GPS we use in our cars. The voice will be saying 'Put flour in now and mix..... Put flour in NOW. " No need for glasses, scrolling down etera, just a bossy voice giving me instructions on how to cook. That's what I would ask for.
anna, Johannesburg, South Africa
Halfway between cookbooks and the Nintendo is www.foodari.com. I am a member and it's great for saving your own recipes and adding other peoples to your own online cookbook.... I always print out the recipes and stick them on the wall cupboards so it's easy to see whilst I'm cooking.
Polly, London,
having just got the nitendo cook book i have to admit the idea is amazing the shopping list is a good idea and the only thing is it wants you to hurry. food was really good though. i have never used the internet except for a special recipe and will never stop using jamie et al.
Dissy, Lichfield,
I would like a computer fixed in the wall of my kitchen at eye level over my work surface so that I can follow a recipe as I work. I would be nice if it was voice activated so that I did not have to keep wiping my hands to scroll down. Now that's not asking much is it?
Paul Bastier, Kendal, Cumbria
I use Google too - but mainly to remind me not to rely on Google. Too often, recipes are mediaeval in construction, and lack originality. A broad library of cookbooks gives inspiration and respects a recipe's culture and provenance. Proper (not crude linear) scaling is a useful facility, though.
L Thompson, London,
My cookbooks have been replaced...by Google.. I suspect that is true of many cooks...I am saving my old copy of the Joy of Cooking so that I can show my grandchildren how we used to find recipes in the old days.
Ellen, Fairway, United States