Autonomous cooking tools and kitchen appliances have largely flopped in the US. While culinary robots like the Thermomix have made some inroads in Europe and elsewhere, adoption in the US has been slow. Super smart ovens, including the June, Suvie and Brava, have likewise struggled to connect with consumers.
Nosh Robotics, a smart home robotics company based in Bengaluru, India, is giving it a go with the commercial launch of the Nosh One, a $1,499 AI-powered cooking robot seven years in the making that the company says “can handle the entire cooking process autonomously: ingredient selection, sautéing, plating and self-cleaning.”
The June Oven was the most promising smart oven we tested. It quietly stopped production in 2023.
Read more: I Tried a Scan-to-Cook Meal Delivery Service. I’m Completely Obsessed
The Nosh One has launched on Kickstarter for a cool $1,499.
The cooking functionality is also limited. While the Nosh can portion, chop (roughly — no mincing or dicing), cook and stir food in its built-in pot using highly programmed recipes so you can walk away while the recipe completes, it can’t bake, roast, boil, sear or steam, making it limited in what it can effectively make.
The Nosh One is similar to a Thermomix. The Thermomix offers more cooking modes and functions, but it can’t automatically deliver precise ingredient amounts to the chamber like the Nosh.
If your dinner menu consists mostly of stews, soups, stir-fries and curries, the Nosh should be able to shoulder a good deal of cooking. Most other foods will have to be cooked the old-fashioned way.
How it works
Ingredient cartridges, which are reusable and dishwasher-safe, store fresh items and dispense them with “millimeter-level precision.” After each meal, a closed-loop wash cycle automatically cleans the cooking chamber, utensils and internal surfaces.



