Every day there’s a new story about robot bartenders on Carnival Cruise Lines or Domino’s Pizza delivery pods trolling the streets in Europe. For now these are mainly stunt-bots, more public relations than practical. Yet there are already many kinds of robots at work in our existing food supply, albeit models slightly more mundane.
Whether robots (and their engineers) will totally replace regular workers is still up for grabs, but in truth bots will soon be everywhere in the supply chain: Packing and warehousing, farming, food processing and, yes, even hamburger flipping and order taking.
This is the first in a series on food bots, starting with a deeper dive into three cases where bots have taken over some of the dreariest jobs in mass production — repetitive, physically stressful, low-paying, dead-end, sometimes dangerous — that many humans would rather not do.
BOT
a device or piece of software that can execute commands or perform routine tasks either automatically or with minimal human intervention.
Author
Rachel Wharton is a James Beard Foundation Journalism award-winning freelance food writer and journalist with a master’s degree in food studies from New York University. Her work has appeared in many publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Saveur, NewYorker. com, Lucky Peach, and six cookbooks and counting.