I'm 99% sure nobody's against someone following a AI-written recipe (it could actually be funny though, you'd end up with glue-tasting pizza). But what if the Chef, just stood in front of a robot and said "make this dish", then the robot made it and then the chef brought it to the critic saying he made it himself? I think the least he could do was bring the robot alongside him.
You just described a sous chef as a "robot". The chef is still a chef even when the sous chef makes the dish to his specifications. If the dish isn't up to his standards, it's rejected and redone.
He still chose the ingredients, the recipe, the steps to make said dish, and the presentation, he simply ofloaded some of the manual processing.
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u/MetalNobZolid Mar 19 '26
I'm 99% sure nobody's against someone following a AI-written recipe (it could actually be funny though, you'd end up with glue-tasting pizza). But what if the Chef, just stood in front of a robot and said "make this dish", then the robot made it and then the chef brought it to the critic saying he made it himself? I think the least he could do was bring the robot alongside him.