The State of Food 3D Printing, Part 2: Food Printers Available Now

The food printing space is still only in its formational stages, but there are early innovators who have actually made this science fiction concept into a reality. There are a number of food 3D printers you can buy right now, all of which are based on extrusion processes and are designed for printing with chocolate or food pastes.

The Focus 3D (€3,900) comes with 10 food-safe and refillable cartridges, four nozzles in two different sizes and access to paste recipes that include: chocolate ganache, meringue, savory dips, fruit, cookie dough, meat, celery-hazelnut, marzipan and icing. After early public events showcasing its printer, the Dutch company behind the system, byFlow, continues to travel the globe to showcase its technology. It also been recently listed as a leading and gender-diverse startup in the Netherlands by the country’s press.

Photos of 3D printed dishes made by Jan Smink. (A) Celery Hazelnut Paste, (B) Berenhap 2.0 with curry paste, and (C) 3D printer cream cheese (available from byFlow).

Natural Machines may not have been able to launch its Foodini printer on Kickstarter in 2014, but the startup continued onward and is now selling the system for $4,000. The Foodini comes with five nozzles of varying sizes and five capsules, along with other accessories.

A hummus castle 3D printed with the Foodini. Image courtesy of Natural Machines.

Like byFlow, Natural Machines offers pre-made designs and software for making your own 3D models. The company also provides some recipes to get started. For those who might need a little help getting off the ground with their Foodinis, the company also offers support packages that range from just one video phone chat with the company to Natural Machines whipping up ingredients, recipes and designs for you and presenting them to your staff on-site. The printers are already in the hands of customers, some of whom we’ll discuss in part three.

Spun out of the University of Exeter, Choc Edge developed the first commercially available food 3D printer. Designed specifically for chocolate, the £1,980 GBP Choc Creator 2.0 is the second generation of this flagship system. Despite the ups and downs of the 3D printing industry, Choc Edge is still in business and has been touring the world and visiting trade shows.

Founded in Germany in 2015, Print2Taste offers services as well as the Procusini printer, capable of printing chocolate, marzipan, pasta and fondant. Though prices aren’t available, Print2Taste does list €250.42 as the price for a separate chocolate 3D printer called the mycusini. Mycusini printers began shipping in November 2019.

There is also a Ukrainian company offering a chocolate 3D printer, though prices aren’t listed and social media activity ceased in early 2019.

Outside of dedicated food printing machines, it is possible to 3D print food paste using specialty extrusion nozzles. In particular, Structur3D offers a nozzle system that hooks up with existing FDM-style printers for printing with viscous materials. Zmorph also has a thick paste printhead for its printers and WASP offers a clay 3D printer that has been used to 3D print food products in the past. Any 3D printer capable of 3D printing viscous material, including extrusion-based bioprinters, should be able to deposit food pastes.

The reason we mention information like whether or not the companies mentioned here are traveling or have social media activity is that, like other 3D printing startups, there’s the possibility that the firms have fizzled out or may never have been real in the first place. Food 3D printing is obviously now a very niche segment with uses that are largely experimental.

With that in mind, if you really are interested in purchasing a food 3D printer, there are some brands to be skeptical of. For example, there is a firm called Mmuse, but we cannot yet find a dedicated website for the brand itself, only several food 3D printers for sale on 3DPrintersOnlineStore.com and on AliExpress. That doesn’t mean that their printers aren’t real, but that their existence is difficult to verify.

Similarly, a Createbot food 3D printer is sold on 3DPrintersOnlineStore.com, but none are listed on the Createbot website. A Chinese company called FoodBot also sells a food printer at the same online store. FoodBot has a website, but social media activity ceased summer of 2019. Another company that sells on Amazon and has current social media activity, but with machine renderings that look eerily similar to the Choc Creator that make this author suspicious is Wiiboox Sweetin.

As new companies sprout up all of the time and some sites publish listicles about food 3D printers, it’s important to be wary about any food 3D printer purchase. Even the verifiable manufacturers listed here could go out of business any day and may longer be able to provide support.

In the next part in our series, we’ll explore some of the ways food printers are being used and the research underway that could push the technology to the next level.

The post The State of Food 3D Printing, Part 2: Food Printers Available Now appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

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The byFlow 3D Food Printer That Could Make Culinary Personalization Happen

Back in 2015, the Dutch company byFlow – then called 3D By Flow – launched their portable and multi-extruder 3D printer “Focus” on Kickstarter. Although their 3D printer reached 39% of its funding goal in order to start the manufacturing process (they were asking for €50,000 but it closed at €19,702), byFlow proceeded to market and make their printer.

byFlow is a family business that was founded in 2015 in the Netherlands, and today it’s one of the leading companies in the 3D food printing market around the world. Their 3D Focus Food Printer is meant to be easy to use and maintain, which makes it accessible to everyone. The Focus is aimed at letting professionals create customized textures, flavors, and shapes through the use of fresh ingredients as well as those ingredients that we usually throw away.

What’s great about the Focus is that it’s portable. This 3D printer can fold up into its compact carrying case making it easy to take it everywhere you want. The case’s size is about 44 x 32 x 11 cm and can be set up in less than 30 seconds. Once it is ready, you can connect the Focus to a computer or plug an SD card containing the STL files in it.

Today, byFlow’s main focus is selling and developing their 3D food printer, as well as giving demonstrations and workshops to the public, and for private events as to increase the interest in the 3D printing of food.

What’s new? byFlow Studio

[Image: byFlow]

byFlow is all about personalization. They recently released byFlow Studio, their new platform and second product. The platform provides design tools, recipes, food design databases, and manuals for support, aimed at food professionals in the culinary industry. As byFlow believes, customized food “is a must to base your assortment on the wishes and needs of your target audience, in order to survive the dynamic world of food services.”

byFlow Studio helps customers to create their own customized designs. To access this tool, you need to log in at www.byflowstudio.com and click on “Design Tool” to start a new project. If you don’t have a personal account, in order to create one, you will need a license key.

[Image: byFlow]

The platform lets you upload different types of files to create unique 3D shapes. It can be text, images, freehand drawings, a photo of someone, and more. Once you’ve upload the file, you can use the edit tools to adjust the design. There are manuals that can help you with the editing tools. Once you’ve finished resizing your design and the software autocorrects it, you can download the design as a printing file and upload it to the Focus 3D Food Printer.

Applications: Customizing Hospital Food

When we speak of hospital food, we instantly think of a distasteful dish made out of basic ingredients that are not appealing at all. The Healthcare sector is aware of the importance of food quality and food trends, since its crucial in convincing patients of hospitals, especially elderly residents, to eat more.

Food contributes to the process of recovery after an illness, but sick and elderly patients usually lack appetite. To avoid this, patients’ meals are usually mashed, as to make them soft and as to get rid of anything that could make the meals difficult to swallow. However, serving mashed food has proved to not solve this issue.

[Image: byFlow]

byFlow believes that their Focus 3D Food Printer acts as a solution. The Focus has an open cartridge system that can make almost every shape you desire and out of almost every purified food ingredient.

“Vegetables, fruits, but also pasta, meat or fish – fresh ingredients must be prepared, processed into a puree and put into a special tube (a cartridge) which is later placed in the 3D Food Printer. A carrot puree in a shape of a carrot, minced fish in a shape of a fish, but also more creative and innovative dishes in new and unique shapes – everything is possible,” explains byFlow.

Ad Verhagen, Nina Hoff and Martijn van Gemst (Chef at Zorgwaard) – Via Waardigheid

Ad Verhagen, the gastronomy manager at Zorgwaard (a nursing home in Oud-Beijerland, Netherlands) has been working with byFlow on implementing personalized 3D printed dishes for the residents in the future.

“We are researching what works best and we are very happy to contribute to the development and improvement of this method of meal preparation. As far as I am concerned, a 3D Food Printer will be available at all Zorgwaard’s locations in a few years’ time. What is so beneficial for the residents must be available everywhere,” Verhagen says.

Applications: Fighting One of The World’s Biggest Problems

Did you know over 30% of the food produced in the world is wasted? It’s not just a misuse of resources, it also has a severe impact on climate change. byFlow’s vision is to “enable professionals to create customized shapes, textures and flavors, by using fresh ingredients or ingredients that otherwise would have been thrown away”. As previously mentioned, the Focus 3D Food Printer has an open cartridge system, which allows almost any food ingredient to be used for printing into any personalized shape.

Image via De Verspillingsfabriek

byFlow shares a similar vision with De Verspillingsfabriek, a surplus food factory that produces food products out of rescued ingredients without adding preservatives or chemical additives to them.

“What surprised me mostly is that those ingredients are not even ugly. Being involved in the food industry I’ve been fully aware of the scale of the food waste problem, but I had no idea that so much of even perfectly good food is being wasted. Only due to miscalculations and hard rules of a profit-driven food industry. We love the idea of producing food out of ingredients that otherwise would be wasted and we immediately knew that there is a space for 3D Food Printing in this project,” says Nina Hoff, byFlow’s CEO, referring to the surplus ingredients.

byFlow and De Verspillingsfabriek met and started their collaboration quickly thanks to HAS Hogeschool, the facilitator of the Food Waste Upcycling Project. Antien Zuidberg, HAS University of Applied Sciences lecturer and coordinator of the Food Innovation study programme, guides students into researching possibilities of upcycling food waste by using the Focus 3D Food Printer.

Antien Zuidberg – Image via HAS University

“When we started 2 years ago with 3D food printing at HAS Hogeschool, I was wondering about where we could have a large societal impact with this new technology, and the first idea was: can we upcycle food waste? I would be thrilled if we can develop an application which can become a viable business case, and which can help this new technology forward as well as upcycle food waste to beautiful new products,” adds Zuidberg about the project.

byFlow’s Focus 3D Food Printer is being used as a tool to help transform surplus food ingredients into ready-to-eat products to give them a “second life”. The Food Waste Upcycling Project brings up new possibilities and hopes: thanks to the Focus, De Verspillingsfabriek can diversify its products range that was then limited to soups and sauces.

[Sources: byFlow, byFlow Studio, HAS University, De Verspillingsfabriek]