Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Smart Home
  4. Legacy Archives

3D printed pizza is coming sooner than you think

Add as a preferred source on Google

For some odd reason, pizza always seems to be at the forefront of emerging technology. It was the first food you could buy via online ordering, the first food to legitimately be delivered via drones, and now it’s dipping its saucy little Italian toes into 3D printing.

Natural Machines, a startup out of Barcelona, has developed a prototype 3D printer called Foodini that can pump out decent, edible-looking pizza just like a normal 3D printer pumps out custom-made lightswitch covers and drain plugs.

Recommended Videos

This isn’t the first time that somebody’s taken a crack at 3D printed food, but it’s arguably one of the best attempts that’s surfaced thus far. NASA has been working on 3D printed food for quite some time, and a handful of other organizations have posted videos like this one that show it’s a viable concept. Most of these early attempts result in a pizza that doesn’t exactly look appetizing. 

Foodini, on the other hand, can actually make a pie that doesn’t look half bad. It starts by pumping a dough mixture in a tight spiral, then repeating the same process with sauce. The cheese and seasonings are sprinkled on top by hand, which we’re pretty sure is cheating, but we’re willing to give Natural Designs a pass for now, especially since Foodini does more than just pizza. In addition to pies, the printer can make things like cookies, chocolates, and even stuffed ravioli. Check out the video below to see it in action.

At this point the device is still just a protoype, but Natural Machines is working to finalize the design and begin mass production. In the end, Foodini is intended to be used as a domestic appliance like a microwave or fridge, but we’re more excited by it’s potential applications at the enterprise level. If food printers found their way into the fast food industry they could potentially eliminate the human element in pizza making.  Imagine being able to order online, have your pizza made to order by a 3D food printer, and then delivered via quadcopter drone. Look up the definition of the word “utopia” in the dictionary, and we’re pretty certain that’s in there somewhere.

Find out more at Natural Machines

Drew Prindle
Former Senior Editor, Features
Drew Prindle is an award-winning writer, editor, and storyteller who currently serves as Senior Features Editor for Digital…
This robot barista is trying to turn championship coffee into a scalable business
Beverage, Coffee, Coffee Cup

Some ideas sound theoretical until they appear in a place as ordinary as your morning coffee. Artly is trying to answer that question with Jarvis, its robotic barista system that is already serving drinks at locations including Muji in Portland, Oregon. The company is attempting to take something that has traditionally depended on human skill, repetition, and instinct, then translate it into a system that can reproduce the same result consistently at scale.

What makes Jarvis more interesting than a standard automation story is that Artly is not trying to build the coffee equivalent of a vending machine. Its goal is to replicate the techniques, standards, and workflow of a world class barista closely enough that the experience still feels intentional rather than automated. According to Digital Trends founder Dan Gaul, who visited the Portland location to try it firsthand, the coffee itself was surprisingly good.

Read more
Magic Cue, one of the smartest Android features on the Pixel phones, is coming to more apps
Google's most underused Pixel 10 feature is finally getting the third-party reach and redesign it needed to become the proactive AI assistant it was always supposed to be.
Magic Cue Settings splash screen on the Google Pixel 10 Pro in Obsidian

Magic Cue, I’d say, was the kind of feature that made me excited about the Pixel 10 launch. However, after the on-stage demo, the feature hardly showed up in day-to-day usage, much less in a useful way.  

Google apparently noticed. At I/O 2026, the company quietly announced that the feature is getting an expansion, along with a possible redesign. While it wasn’t the headline announcement, it could surely be something that makes Pixel 10 users excited again. 

Read more
A caring robot just won a silver medal at one of the world’s biggest flower shows
Robocrops Chelsea show

When you think of the Chelsea Flower Show, robots are probably the last thing on your mind. Yet, the University of Lincoln showed up with exactly that and walked away with a Silver Gilt medal.

The exhibit, RoboCrops: Plant Selection, Beyond the Visible, was put together by the University's Lincoln Institute for Agri-Food Technology, or LIAT, and placed right in the show's GreenSTEM zone. That's the section dedicated to exhibitions exploring the intersection of horticulture, science, technology, and the environment.

Read more