Five such machines are now being made, will soon arrive in airports, hospitals

Oct 7, 2011 18:31 GMT  ·  By
The first pizza vending machine has been created, will soon emerge in hospitals and airports
   The first pizza vending machine has been created, will soon emerge in hospitals and airports

Waiting half an hour, if not even more, to eat pizza in a restaurant, can be a pretty dreadful experience. And what happens if you’re hungry or craving a pizza but you’re nowhere near a restaurant? Puzant Khachadourian aims to solve all these problems.

Enter Pizzametry, branded the first fully automated pizza vending machine in the world.

This machine, which looks very similar in both shape and size to a soda vending machine, as the video below will conform, can cook pizza from natural ingredients in under 4 minutes.

What’s even better, you can even see how your pizza is being made and, when it goes into the oven, you can allow yourself to be entertained by the huge in-built TV.

Call it modern man’s dream come true: a machine that delivers hot, delicious pizza in only a few minutes, while he doesn’t have to cook and can continue watching television.

The video below is of a prototype for the five machines that are now in production for sale. While some adjustments to it are still to be made, it basically shows how it operates.

It can make 150 pizzas until it runs out of ingredients. All ingredients are natural, nothing is made with additives or preservatives.

The dough, made from yeast, is cut into slices and then pressed into the pie shape of a pizza. Ingredients are then dropped on top of it, depending on which of the 3 varieties of pizza you’ve chosen, cheese, pepperoni or white.

The pizza then goes into the oven, which means you have a couple of minutes or so of watching TV on the in-built screen, which also shows you the time lapsed and left until you get your pizza to go.

When it arrives, it’s packaged neatly in a small cardboard box, which comes with vents to let the Steam escape. The box also comes with two other ingredients and a cutting instrument.

“The machine could be installed in airports, on Army bases, in hospitals. The more Puzant considered the idea, the more he began to invest himself in it, and soon enough he and a team of engineers were on their way to building their first successful prototype,” a post of the official webpage of Pizzametry writes.