TY - GEN
T1 - An extension of menu planning algorithm for two-phase homemade cooking
AU - Funabiki, Nobuo
AU - Matsushima, Yukiko
AU - Nakanishi, Toru
AU - Watanabe, Kan
PY - 2013/12/1
Y1 - 2013/12/1
N2 - Nowadays, many people keep busy lives due to working in companies, studying in schools, or taking care of children or senior parents. As a result, it has become very hard for them to cook foods for suppers by themselves at home after long-hour duties at daytime in weekdays. Previously, to assist homemade cooking of such busy people, we proposed a two-phase cooking such that the preparation phase of cooking foods that they will eat on the following weekdays is performed on a weekend, and the finishing phase for the foods for a supper is completed on the day in short time. Then, we presented a menu planning algorithm to assist generating one-week menus for this two-phase cooking. Unfortunately, we found that this algorithm has the following drawbacks in practical use: 1) the selection of food preference is not easy, 2) the use of preferred ingredients for cooking cannot be directly specified, and 3) the nutrition balance of foods in a menu is not considered. In this paper, we extend this algorithm to solve them by newly defining a preference index and the food balance guide by Japanese government. We verify the effectiveness of the extended algorithm through generating five-day menus from 241 food candidates.
AB - Nowadays, many people keep busy lives due to working in companies, studying in schools, or taking care of children or senior parents. As a result, it has become very hard for them to cook foods for suppers by themselves at home after long-hour duties at daytime in weekdays. Previously, to assist homemade cooking of such busy people, we proposed a two-phase cooking such that the preparation phase of cooking foods that they will eat on the following weekdays is performed on a weekend, and the finishing phase for the foods for a supper is completed on the day in short time. Then, we presented a menu planning algorithm to assist generating one-week menus for this two-phase cooking. Unfortunately, we found that this algorithm has the following drawbacks in practical use: 1) the selection of food preference is not easy, 2) the use of preferred ingredients for cooking cannot be directly specified, and 3) the nutrition balance of foods in a menu is not considered. In this paper, we extend this algorithm to solve them by newly defining a preference index and the food balance guide by Japanese government. We verify the effectiveness of the extended algorithm through generating five-day menus from 241 food candidates.
KW - Menu planning algorithm
KW - food balance guide
KW - ingredient
KW - serving number
KW - two-phase cooking
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84892643276&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84892643276&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/GCCE.2013.6664853
DO - 10.1109/GCCE.2013.6664853
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84892643276
SN - 9781479908929
T3 - 2013 IEEE 2nd Global Conference on Consumer Electronics, GCCE 2013
SP - 352
EP - 356
BT - 2013 IEEE 2nd Global Conference on Consumer Electronics, GCCE 2013
T2 - 2013 IEEE 2nd Global Conference on Consumer Electronics, GCCE 2013
Y2 - 1 October 2013 through 4 October 2013
ER -