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AI-Powered Kitchen Robot Wins International Robotics Award – The Brasilians

AI-Powered Kitchen Robot Wins International Robotics Award

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Recent advances in robotics and artificial intelligence (AI) are bringing the world inventions and applications that seemed impossible until recently. Proof of this is that a kitchen robot won the 2026 Robotics Award, an international robotics prize awarded in Hannover, Germany.

The creation of the company GoodBytz, based in Hamburg, also in Germany, requires only one human assistance: supplying it with fresh ingredients and semi-prepared items and selecting which dish to make from an electronic menu. Once that’s done, the cooking robot uses the power of robotics and AI to prepare various types of meals.

The robot separates the food into pots, calculates the cooking time and temperature, stirs the food in the various pots for better cooking, serves the dishes and, no less importantly, washes the dishes at the end. The automatic kitchen system was created in 2021.

International Technology Fair

The award ceremony took place at the end of February, during an event that previewed innovations from Hannover Messe, the world’s largest industrial technology fair, scheduled to take place from April 20 to 24 in Hannover, a city of about 550,000 inhabitants in northern Germany.

Brazil will be the guest country at this year’s edition, which, in addition to robots and AI, will showcase technologies in digitalization, automation, decarbonization, and clean energy. President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and the German Chancellor (head of government), Friedrich Merz, have confirmed their attendance at Hannover Messe.

Beyond Restaurants

At the award ceremony, the co-founder and CEO (executive director) of GoodBytz, Hendrik Susemihl, explained that the cooking robot was designed not only for restaurants.

“When we think about robotics and food, we think a lot about infrastructure. So, I don’t just think about restaurants. I think about hospitals, universities, and military infrastructure…”, he said.

For Hendrik Susemihl, the invention helps overcome bottlenecks in the food industry. “It’s an industry extremely dependent on human labor. We’ve all experienced restaurants closing, labor shortages, and also quality problems”, he justifies.

“In 2026, we have robots cooking for humans, which is really great”, he assesses.

Origin of the Idea

In a conversation with Agência Brasil right after the award win, the CEO of GoodBytz shared that the idea for the cooking robot came from a “very personal story”.

“My father suffered a very serious heart attack, and my wife and I became very interested in healthy eating and also in teaching him how it changes his life and health”, recalled the director, who is also a co-founder of Neura Robotics, a humanoid robot company.

Hendrik Susemihl said he found it complicated sometimes “to go out and find something decent and healthy to eat”.

He says this led him to question why the meal industry operates the same way it did decades ago and hasn’t evolved like other manufacturing sectors.

“Why not build a product that can really make freshly cooked things in a massively adaptable and scalable way, and use robotics and AI exactly for that?”, he asked.

In the Coming Years

Asked about expectations for the cooking robot in the next five and ten years, Hendrik Susemihl said he believes it will become “quite normal” for automation to be part of people’s daily lives, not just in food services.

“People now, of course, are a bit afraid of change, because for decades people cooked manually, and the craft of a chef is something very established in our culture too”, he admitted.

But he highlights niches that smart kitchens can fill.

“Where it’s very difficult to find people or where it’s simply too expensive to serve, for example, 50 people in a company not near the city center”, he says.

The robotics expert believes that currently there is a divide between premium gastronomy and basic food consumption.

“Basic consumption, unfortunately, is often of very low quality”, he says.

“That’s what we’re targeting with robotics, simply to elevate it a lot, making very good meals accessible to everyone at fair prices”, he maintains.

Today, the company’s clients include the United States Army; the French multinational collective catering company Sodexo; the German supermarket chain Edeka; and the European group Transgourmet, which handles food delivery.

Source: Agência Brasil


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