Researchers 3D-print 7-layer cheesecake for the first time, using Nutella and jam
Summary by USA Today
Researchers at Columbia University have created a 3D printer that can make food, including complicated multilayered desserts.
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Researchers 3D printed this cheesecake
Researchers have been pushing the limits of 3D printing for decades, using the manufacturing technique to churn out consumer goods such as furniture and shoes, human organs and even a rocket. But can the industrial technology be applied to make a fully baked dessert that can be fabricated in your home kitchen?
VIDEO: Columbia University engineers create a laser-cooked, 3D-printed cheesecake
After some trial and error, researchers at Columbia University's Creative Machines Lab figured out how to 3D print a creamy, gooey cheesecake. Postdoctoral researcher Jonathan Blutinger explains the process and the technology that's just starting to emerge in the world of cooking.
By Jackie Wattles, CNN Video by Channon Hodge, CNN Researchers have been pushing the limits of 3D printing for decades, using the manufacturing technique to churn out consumer goods such as furniture and shoes, human organs and even a rocket. But can the industrial technology be applied to make a fully baked dessert that can be fabricated in your home kitchen? Engineers at Columbia University set out to do just that. A team whipped up a seven-in…
By Jackie Wattles, CNN Video by Channon Hodge, CNN Researchers have been pushing the limits of 3D printing for decades, using the manufacturing technique to churn out consumer goods such as furniture and shoes, human organs and even a rocket. But can the industrial technology be applied to make a fully baked dessert that can be fabricated in your home kitchen? Engineers at Columbia University set out to do just that. A team whipped up a seven-in…
Will this 3D-printed cheesecake spell the end for your oven?
Columbia University’s 3D-printed cheesecake (Picture: Jonathan Blutinger/Columbia Engineering) Great British Bake Off could become a very different show after researchers from Columbia University made a breakthrough in 3D-printed desserts, producing a seven-ingredient cheesecake made of edible ink – at the same time predicting software, lasers and printers will soon replace ovens, stoves and microwaves. For many, 3D-printed food is the dream. No…