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The price of the machine will eventually go as high as $279, Tovala founder David Rabie told Business Insider. The machines are expected to start shipping out before the end of the year.
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"Our goal is to sit on every countertop in America and bring fresh food to everyone," Rabie said in an interview.
Rabie recently stopped by Business Insider's office to show us how the machine works.
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The Tovala cooks pods of ingredients, including fish, chicken, pasta, vegetables, popcorn, and oatmeal, and it even poaches eggs.
Users can create their own recipes, or they can subscribe to get fresh, chef-designed meals delivered to them weekly that are specifically developed for the machine.
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Tovala's meal delivery is similar to services like Blue Apron and Plated, which deliver groceries and accompanying recipes to customers.
But unlike those services, Tovala's meals require no prep work.
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The food arrives seasoned and ready to be cooked inside foil pods.
To use the machine, you remove the lids from the pods and place the pods inside the device.
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Then you scan a bar code on the packaging with a phone.
The Tovala will communicate with the phone and find the recipe for the food.
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That's when the cooking begins.
The cooking technology differs depending on the meal. In the case of one of the company's roasted chicken recipes, the Tovala will steam the food for about 12 minutes, then switch to broil mode for five minutes to crisp everything.
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We tried baking cookies and cooking three meals: a miso baked Chilean sea bass with a side of broccoli; stuffed chicken and steamed asparagus; and chicken posole stew.
First we tried the sea bass. The fish was "shockingly good," according to our reviewers, and "could have passed for something you would order in a restaurant." The broccoli was steamed perfectly — not too mushy (overcooked) or hard (undercooked).
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Next on the menu was a chicken breast stuffed with mushrooms, spinach, and cheese, with a side of roasted asparagus.
The stuffed chicken was "just OK," but the side of asparagus — which was served with a basil and parmesan pesto — was a crowd favorite.
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The chicken posole stew was delicious, and it was everyone's favorite dish.
Tortilla chips and yogurt crema came with the dish as garnishes. We were instructed to add those ingredients after the stew was finished cooking.
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"The fresh avocado, tortilla chips, and yogurt crema made the dish feel elevated and fresh," Business Insider retail editor Ashley Lutz said. "It was the furthest thing from the 'airplane food' we expected."
The Tovala is targeting people who want to eat healthy but don't have the time to cook — a rapidly growing demographic. The company could initially face some hurdles, however, in getting consumers to pay for the initial cost of the machine and in helping them understand the technology behind it. When we described the concept to people who had never heard of it, many thought it sounded like a glorified microwave that cooks Lean Cuisine-style meals.
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But Rabie says it's nothing like that. "The machine's cooking technology has been used in really high-end commercial kitchens," he says. "We're bringing that to consumers at an affordable price."
The food is fresh — never frozen — and will be sourced locally and organically whenever possible, Rabie says. The company has hired experienced chefs, including some Michelin-starred chefs, to develop Tovala's recipes.
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The Tovala will also give consumers the option to submit their own recipes to its app.
If the company decides to produce and distribute a user-submitted recipe, it will pay royalties to the person who created it. Rabie is hoping this encourages the growth of a passionate online community around the Tovala.
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The company has more than $600,000 in funding from the Chicago-based Origin Ventures and the Mountain View, California-based Y Combinator along with several other firms. The machine won the University of Chicago's annual New Venture Challenge last spring.
Overall, we were impressed with the Tovala. The taste and quality of the food was surprisingly good. Every dish tasted like a gourmet, home-cooked meal but without any hassle or effort.
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