A new Monash University project programs food to 'dance' across platters, providing playful and interactive culinary opportunities for diners and chefs.
The research paper explores the design of food as a material through which computer programs can be enacted.
Food interaction design researcher and lead author of the research Jialin Deng, from Monash University's Faculty of Information Technology (IT), designed a system encompassing a plate fitted with electrodes that can be programmed to move different food elements like sauces and condiments around on their own, creating new combinations or elements for the diner in a playful manner.
Ms Deng said the project was about exploring the integration of food's material properties and 'computational' capabilities. The aim was to achieve different dining journeys.
"For example, a chef can predefine the locations where they want to put the food droplets and ingredients, and they can programme the dish frame by frame, like you do in animation," Ms Deng said.
"We can put solid items and watery items together, we can merge two different flavours, we can transport various things towards the plate, we can play with chemical or physical reactions like in molecular gastronomy."
Interaction, game and play design expert from the Faculty of IT's Creative Technologies discipline group and co-author of the research, Professor Florian 'Floyd' Mueller, says the research is a glimpse into the future of food and computing.
"The integration of food and computing will transform how we understand both computing and food as not two very different things, but a new frontier that combines the best of both," Professor Mueller said.
"This will not only change the hospitality industry, who can create much more engaging experiences by being able to tell new and different stories through interactive food, but also computer science education, where students learn about computing by eating food."
The researchers conducted co-design workshops with chefs to give them a chance to experiment with the system by crafting real dishes to create new culinary combinations. The dishes were presented in multiple subsequent dining experience events.
Monash Club Head Chef and one of the workshop participants, Mr Matthew Birley, said combining technology with food presents a great new path for chefs in terms of culinary experimentation.
"The project helped to unlock additional dimensions to creating dishes while thinking more keenly about the diner's interaction with the food," Mr Birley said.
"We really start to interact with the feelings and movements of the diner. I think this can have a great impact on what we can do as chefs in the dining industry."
This research was supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC) LP210200656 in collaboration with Worksmith.
Lead researcher from the Faculty of IT Jialin Deng and Head Chef Matthew Birley are