'Robot Chef' could revolutionize or kill home cooking

Image | Moley Robotic Chef

Caption: Moley's robotic chef shows off its chops in the kitchen. (Moley Robotics)

Audio | The Current : 'Robot Chef' could revolutionize or kill home cooking - June 23, 2015

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MEET A DIFFERENT KIND OF IRON CHEF ...
If you dread the prospect of hitting the kitchen and cooking up a storm for dinner after a long day's work at the office... then you may just be in luck. New technology has been invented with the potential to solve your culinary exhaustion, right in your own home. That is — if you don't mind handing over family recipes and sous chef duties to a "robot chef"(external link) built right into your kitchen.
Today as part of our project By Design(external link), we are exploring the future of home cooked meals and asking whether robotics in the kitchen will revolutionize the way we eat... or signal the end of home cooking altogether.

Media Audio | The Current : Robot chefs has Bonnie Stern asking, where's the love?

Caption: Chef Tim Anderson may be impressed with what a Robot Chef can whip up in the kitchen but food columnist Bonnie Stern isn't having any of it. To her food comes with love and there's no love with this Iron Chef. Listen to a preview of this debate.

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The goal of the robot is to help busy people get healthy home-cooked meals — without all the work. It may sound futuristic, but the creators say the "robot chef" should be available by 2017.
Moley Robotics' development chef Tim Anderson(external link) joined us from London, England to talk about the new technology.
While Anderson is optimistic about the robot's potential, another culinary lover is a little more wary. We spoke to cookbook author and food columnist Bonnie Stern(external link), who thinks the robot speaks to our culture's growing disconnect and fear of simple, wholesome home cooking. She was in Toronto.

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Would you like to have a robot cook you meals? Or does the idea of metal making you a meal leave you cold?
Tweet us @TheCurrentCBC(external link) using #ByDesignCBC. Post on our Facebook page(external link). Or email us(external link) through the website.
This segment was produced by The Current's Shannon Higgins and Sujata Berry.