Innovation in Microwave cooking is slow and long in
coming.
They're great for re-heating food, but cooking food
is another thing, as the traditional Microwave either burns your food or leaves
you eating alternately warm or cold re-heated frozen food.
So it's nice to know that a Freescale Semiconductor
has developed a Sage Microwave that uses RF (Radio Frequencies) emitters as
reported in the article “New
RF Microwave Promises Recipe for Better Cooking”, published June 23, 2015
By Steve Castle, DigitalTrends.
Making its debut at the Freescale Technology Forum
in Austin, Texas, the Freescale Sage Microwave promises to cook food more
evenly and without burning. Freescale claims that its solid-state RF emitters
control the location, cycles and levels of cooking energy.
Freescale
Sage Microwave – Why RF means Food not burnt and Frozen Food properly re-heated
This means the food is heated properly and to the
correct degree, ensuring that raw or frozen food is brought out of that state
rapidly with no parts left uncooked. This targeted cooking means consistency in
cooking, improved taste and more nutritious meals cooked straight inside of the
Microwave.
The Microwave has convection heating capability,
allowing you to sear, brown, bake and poach all types of meat such as chicken,
beef, pork and fish.
Unlike traditional Microwaves that use magnetrons, the
Freescale Sage Microwave can take on a variety of shapes, including a circular
design. No more boring square designs; your Microwave can be a cylinder,
capable of cooking multiple items at the same time within the same chamber.
Freescale's concept Microwave is Internet connected
via your home router and controllable using a smartphone App.
Too bad it doesn’t have a pair of robotic hands like
the US$15,000 Moley Robotics Cooking Robot as described in my blog article
entitled “US$15,000
Moley Robotics Cooking Robot – Cooking Robot seeking Taste for Human Food to
take over in 2017” so that it can cook they food you ordered from the
restaurant or whip up something from ingredients in the kitchen.
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