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Technology

Delivery App Orders Restaurants To Cook Almost Whatever You Want (bloomberg.com) 77

Russia's largest tech company is launching a delivery service that allows a customer to tell a restaurant what to cook, whether it's on the menu or not. From a report: Yandex NV will prepare meal kits with ingredients based on a customer's requested dish and send it to a nearby restaurant for cooking. Once the food is ready, Yandex couriers will handle delivery. Yandex has been rapidly expanding its delivery services. In 2017 it merged with Uber Technologies' Russian ride-hailing and food-ordering businesses. The new offering, which it calls a "cloud restaurant" service, mashes together Yandex.Eats, which delivers cooked food from restaurants, and Yandex.Chef, which already supplies meal kits for home cooking. For now, customers won't be able to create completely bespoke delicacies, but Yandex has created a list of hundreds of the most popular dishes among users of its food businesses, which will be priced typically for no more than 250 rubles ($3.86) per dish. The service will be initially available in Moscow and St. Petersburg.
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Delivery App Orders Restaurants To Cook Almost Whatever You Want

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  • Visit Your Grandma (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 24, 2019 @12:32PM (#58648832)

    Put down your phone and go visit you grandma instead. Even if it's just boiled cabbage and potatoes, she'll make it with love. You'll both be better off for it.

    • Put down your phone and go visit you grandma instead. Even if it's just boiled cabbage and potatoes, she'll make it with love. You'll both be better off for it.

      Grandma will only answer the door these days if she's somehow become a lich. In which case she'll make boiled cabbage and potatoes out of me sooner than for me. I would not be better off for it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yes, they definitely have the right to eat what they want.
    The problem is that most are so clueless, they can't even tell they're clueless, and hence overconfident.
    Also, humans aren't made to be fully independent, and most of our will is shaped by other people. We believe it is ours anyway.

    We can't be experts in everything, nor is that a good idea. I may be a good programmer, and a pretty good cook too, but I can only become an expert in one, at the expense of the other. I cerainly won't tell my doc where to

    • Oh look, it's Putin's anti-democracy shill here again. How'd you get modded up, Ivan, got multiple accounts with mod points to spend? You don't have a democracy and you don't want anyone else to have one, either. Tough shit.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Whoever is actually qualified, will already cook for himself, and not want to pay somebody to do it.

      That's not true.... I can cook, but that does not mean I want to do 100% of my cooking and never want to eat out. I enjoy eating good, new or different food other people have prepared as well -- even indulging in fast food on occasion.

      I think the same is true for anyone. Being qualified does not imply you don't ever pay other people to do the task.

      Now what I don't understand is why any restaurants wo

  • "whether it's on the menu or not."

    The menu is just a suggestion. If the ingredients are there, they will cook it for you, it's their business.

    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @12:52PM (#58648980) Journal

      The menu is just a suggestion.

      Yes, and that suggestion is half the point of having a chef.

      I don't hire an interior decorator to paint my walls, I hire one to suggest good colors and good materials that will go well together. By the same token, I go to a restaurant not just to have a skillfully cooked meal, but also to have a masterful chef "design" or "invent" that meal, or whatever the word is in the food business. If they're just going to cook what I tell them to, I'll just do it myself.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        By the same token, I go to a restaurant not just to have a skillfully cooked meal, but also to have a masterful chef "design" or "invent" that meal

        And then there's the pepperoni pizza. May I suggest that other people order out for other reasons? I've been to restaurants where you order complete plates and those you mix and match yourself, both have a place. Unless you're asking the chef to have some kind of unique skill or ingredient to make that particular dish, who cares if you want salmon with baked potato and ketchup. It's your meal...

    • Cooking is more art than science. There's tons and tons of little details that go into a meal worth eating. Having a pizza shop make you Calamari is not going to turn out so good...
    • by Njovich ( 553857 )

      Have you tried that? If it's a very simple and reasonable request (you really would like some potatoes) this is probably true for most restaurants, but for whole dishes I doubt many restaurants would bother.

    • by AuMatar ( 183847 )

      Some restaurants. Many won't go off menu, especially if busy, because it takes more time and makes the chef's jobs harder. They might have potatoes for fries, but that doesn't mean they'll dedicate an oven for an hour to make you a baked potato.

    • "Yes, and that suggestion is half the point of having a chef. "

      I think you're assuming your food is cooked by a "Chef" in most restaurants. At quite a lot of places your food is much more likely to be made by a line cook whose expertise lies in making the dishes they've been specifically taught to make.

      Along with that, based strictly on my own experience working in the restaurant biz and the two professional chefs I know, kitchen staffs hate special requests. The menu is not a choose your own adventure book

    • I can assure you that customers that go off the menu are a fucking plague and the kitchen staff will absolutely hate you for it.
  • by rnturn ( 11092 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @12:47PM (#58648944)

    ... drones. How can this be a serious delivery service if drones aren't involved?

  • . . . I'll have your liver with some fava beans . . .

  • Where's my Hasenfeffer?

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @12:56PM (#58649008)

    Mom.

  • in soviet russia we cook you!

  • Best Russian invention since People Being Too Lazy To Learn Recipes!

  • by turp182 ( 1020263 ) on Friday May 24, 2019 @01:03PM (#58649050) Journal

    They have all of the food already. Local ones around me offer some cooked things like chicken and mashed potatoes and a salad bar (ugh).

    We do Blue Apron which is a nightmare of mostly recyclable plastics (should I waste potable water or recycle this little container?).

    Maybe grocers could offer a big menu, 100+ different meals. Maybe not 100% custom, but a very wide variety. I would expect they would sell a lot of add ons like fruit and beverages. Delivery service would be nice, but I would take carry out (only a small grocer near my house, big one by the office).

  • I've always wanted to try whale, as prepared Japanese style. I wonder if this would be a good way to have it prepared. Most whale is offered as an underground delicacy, which is a shame. Providing the materials absolves the restaurant of legal responsibility.
  • Think Fight Club. I was logged out when posting that earlier.
  • It's $3.80 a dish? That's less than the cost of a meal at in a shelter
  • Where's the rideshare version of this? You pay someone to come to your kitchen, rummage through the fridge and pantry, make a large meal, eat a percentage of it, clean up, and package the leftovers for you. Then you know there are leftovers waiting for you when you get off the couch/floor/phone/pot.
  • Yandex - cook me a hot pocket!
  • My first thought was, can you pick the meal AND the restaurant? Could be fun to have a pizza made by a fancy French place, or a 5 course gourmet meal done be the local burger joint. Chinese food done at a Japanese restaurant, I bet you could taste the anger. The possibilities are only limited by your imagination and credit card limit.
  • At most restaurants, you want to order one of their signature items. Never mind things NOT on the menu, stay away from dishes that aren't very popular that ARE on the menu. You might regret ordering that cheeseburger at a Mexican restaurant, or the steak at Denny's.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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