
At Sushi Singularity in Tokyo, guests are asked to submit fecal samples to receive a sushi meal customized to their biology. As reported by designboom, this innovative sushi spot from Open Meals creates personalized sushi recipes based on each diner’s nutritional requirements.
Open Meals is renowned for its bold food experiments, including the "sushi teleportation" idea, where robotic arms serve 3D-printed sushi cubes. This new venture takes the futuristic sushi concept even further.
Before dining at Sushi Singularity, guests will receive a health test kit in the mail, containing vials for samples like urine, saliva, and feces. Once returned, their genome and nutritional details will be analyzed and used to create a personalized "Health ID." The restaurant then crafts sushi recipes tailored to the guest’s specific nutrient needs, even infusing the dishes with vitamins and minerals directly using a machine.
Sushi Singularity takes dystopian dining to the next level, with all sushi created by a 3D printer and large robotic arms. The menu showcases cutting-edge technology, with items like lattice-structured cell-cultured tuna, uni powder solidified with a CO2 laser, and intricate models of Japanese castles made from flash-frozen squid.
Sushi Singularity is set to launch in Tokyo sometime in 2020. However, it won’t be the first sushi robots in Japan: Ride On Express introduced sushi delivery robots in 2017.
