It looks like 3D printers are going to give us the best chance to 'dial up' a meal science fiction style - but food giant Nestlé has gone one better and said they're also working on a machine that can figure out the nutrients our body needs as well.
Bloomberg reports that the project (which has been inexplicably code-named 'Iron Man') would analyse an individuals' dietary deficiencies, studying a range of factors from carbohydrates to cholesterol to produce highly personalised meals.
"Iron Man is an analysis of what's missing in our diets, and a product, tailored to you, to help make up that difference," Ed Beagle, the director of Nestlé's Institute of Health Sciences research arm, told Bloomberg. "In the past, food was just food. We're going in a new direction."
Nestlé has even compared the machine to the 'replicator' that synthesizes meals in the Star Trek universe, creating food that has just the right levels of magnesium or vitamin D to suit the individual. The machine might eventually produce food that arrives as a powder capsule similar to Nestlé's Nespresso coffee machines.
The company admitted that this level of nutritional personalisation is at least a decade away from commercialisation (and probably much longer than that) as creating 'nutrient profiles' that map individuals' deficiencies and excesses currently cost well over $1000.