A dish made using IBM Watson technology for the Cognitive Cooking collaboration with the Institute of Culinary Education

ICE + IBM

Cognitive Cooking with Chef Watson

Over the past few years, ICE has been collaborating with IBM researchers, testing the limits of ingredient pairings and developing strategies to implement cognitive cooking in the culinary arts.

What is "cognitive cooking"?

IBM-logo_375x375.jpg“The idea of cognitive cooking is machines and humans working together — in this case, a very complex analytic system drawing from the vast collected knowledge of chemistry, food culture and taste preferences to help chefs break new ground." — Mahmoud Naghshineh, IBM Research

"For a chef, creating flavor pairs is natural, but seeing ingredients matched in larger groups and understanding the science — the shared compounds that make these foods taste good together — is revolutionary." — James Briscione, Institute of Culinary Education

“Rather than a crutch that removes the chef’s decision-making process from the equation, this technology pushes chefs outside of their familiar comfort zones to consider new ideas and techniques toward deliciousness.” — Michael Laiskonis, Institute of Culinary Education

At the Forefront of Flavor

As one of the nation’s leading culinary schools, our mission at ICE has always been to push the envelope and anticipate the changes that will shape the culinary industry. So when IBM, one of the world’s most innovative companies, approached us to collaborate in developing a system that could change the way chefs approach creativity, we were more than a little intrigued.

Michael Laiskonis, Florian Pinel and James Briscione inside the IBM Food Truck

With the aid of our extensive recipe databases, our experienced instructors, staff and long history of culinary education, IBM has been able to test and refine scientific theories regarding the pairing of ingredients, establishing a system, Chef Watson, that evaluates combinations not only for pleasantness, but also for surprise and synergy of ingredients.

Chef Watson’s cognitive creativity offers unprecedented opportunities for culinary professionals to not only create unusual and exciting restaurant dishes, but also to develop recipes to accommodate specific health concerns, address factors such as sustainability or even create new products to address important issues, such as world hunger.

In the spring of 2014, IBM and ICE took Chef Watson on the road in the guise of the #IBMFoodTruck. Debuting at IBM Pulse in Las Vegas and South by Southwest in Austin, the truck offered innovators from around the globe the opportunity to interact with Chef Watson and taste the fruits of its collaborations with ICE Chefs. Since then, ICE was invited back to South by Southwest in 2015 to speak on a panel titled "How Chef Watson Changed the Way We Prepared Food." The conversation looked back on the year since Watson made its debut, recounting the ways we have interpreted food differently and made new discoveries in both professional kitchens and at home, and how that will continue to evolve in the future.

Recipes for Innovation from IBM and the Institute of Culinary Education

After serving and interacting with thousands of technology and food enthusiasts via the IBM Food Truck, it became clear that the public was hungry for more cognitive cooking. Which is why, in the summer of 2014, ICE went back into the kitchen with IBM to begin work on the next chapter in this groundbreaking collaboration.

The Chef Watson cookbook — Recipes for Innovation from IBM and the Institute of Culinary Education — is a revolutionary display of the creative collaboration of man and machine. Combining the culinary talent and experience of ICE chefs with the cognitive power of Watson, these recipes will redefine the way professional and home cooks approach flavor pairing and the creation of new dishes. The cookbook, published by Sourcebooks, is now available in stores and online.

IBM and Institute of Culinary Education Cognitive Cooking Chef Watson Cookbook

Photographed by Food & Wine Digital Food Award winners Diane Cu-Porter and Todd Porter and brought to life by acclaimed publication designer Don Morris, the book is as visually thrilling as it is innovative. Brimming with stunning plating and recipe development from ICE Director of Culinary Research James Briscione and Creative Director Michael Laiskonis, it is one of the most groundbreaking cookbooks to hit shelves since the release of Modernist Cooking.

IBM and the Institute of Culinary Education collaborated on the IBM Food Truck

News and Press

As seen on: USA Today; CNN; NBC; ABC (KVUE), BBCZagatThe ExaminerFood & Wine, E!, Newsday, Cooking Channel TV, Popular Mechanics, Yahoo, Metro New York, Fox Business, Business Insider, The Daily Mail, NPR: The SaltThe New YorkerThe New York Times, Gizmodo, Bloomberg, Fast Co. DesignWired, Empirical Zeal