{"id":425,"date":"2015-12-04T13:09:45","date_gmt":"2015-12-04T18:09:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.montclair.edu\/entrepreneur\/?p=425"},"modified":"2018-03-28T16:19:47","modified_gmt":"2018-03-28T20:19:47","slug":"the-future-of-eating-with-help-of-3d-printing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.montclair.edu\/entrepreneur\/2015\/12\/04\/the-future-of-eating-with-help-of-3d-printing\/","title":{"rendered":"The Future of Eating, with help of 3D printing"},"content":{"rendered":"
The future of eating has been a topic of focus this semester in ENTR 290-02 “Intro to 3D Printing and Design.”<\/p>\n
“Each group looked at this in very different ways — from how houses could becoming living, to roads eating pollutants, to new forms of dishes,” said Prof. Iain Kerr, who teaches the class with Prof. Jason Frasca. “The 3D printing became the tool to iterate various prototypes from molds to grow mushroom bricks to sensory devices to edible plates.”<\/p>\n
As the students practiced their final pitches this week, there was a special judge in the classroom, Shah Dabiri, STEM education manager at Picatinny Arsenal. Dabiri offered to bring “lunch,” a food from the past that’s very much in use today, and will be in the future: MRE’s or Meal Ready to Eat. MRE’s are more likely to be found on a battlefield than a college classroom, yet the packets of calorie-laden food offer many lessons in innovation, as does the ENTR 290-02 course.<\/p>\n
The contents of one MRE. (Yes, there are Reese’s Pieces in this one.)<\/p>\n
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Shah Dabiri made a special presentation about the MRE’s before providing feedback on the students’ 3D printed innovations.<\/p>\n
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Video snippet of Dabiri’s presentation.<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n A student helped Dabiri pass out the MRE’s:<\/p>\n The MRE packaging includes directions about how to “cook” them. Basically, you just add water and a special heating device:<\/p>\n Some ENTR 290-02 students cooking their MRE’s.<\/p>\n
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