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DS

Personal Trainer: Cooking Non-Review

by Neal Ronaghan - February 23, 2009, 8:06 am EST
Total comments: 16

Having the DS transformed into an interactive cookbook is a novel idea, but only if it works well. With close to 250 recipes and a plethora of DS-specific features, Personal Trainer: Cooking works wonderfully and is a fantastic aid for making food. Nintendo even dug into its large game catalog and stowed a cooking-related game, Game & Watch's Chef, into Personal Trainer: Cooking as an unlockable.

It's all very intuitive once you dive in and check out the game's interface, which is easily controlled with the stylus on the touch screen. The in-game voice is clear, and the speed of the male voice can be tweaked to your liking. For easy browsing, all the recipes can be sorted by time required, specific ingredients, or region of origin. Once you're looking at a recipe, you can look at the list of ingredients, what utensils it requires, and step-by-step instructions. There are also pictures of the dish along the way, but they aren't detailed enough to be too helpful. The amount of food to be made can be changed by increasing or decreasing the serving size, which removes the math from cooking. You can even organize a shopping list that is easily accessible from the main menu to help you prepare.

The instructions are relatively descriptive and easy to follow. They can be navigated using the microphone on the DS to avoid dirtying the system when you're making food. The voice commands don't offer too much frustration, but occasionally you'll have to repeat a phrase once or twice. The main complaint I have with it is that, due to the sensitivity of the microphone, it would misinterpret noises and skip ahead several steps while I was busy cooking. Although, the voice commands can be turned off easily if they become too much of an issue.

Personal Trainer: Cooking does what it intends to do and does it quite well. It's easy to use and pretty practical. It might not make you a great chef, but it'll give you some basic tips to further your cooking prowess or, at the very least, show off some dishes that you might have never tried.

Talkback

How do you change the microphone sensitivity?  All I found was a microphone test, but it didn't seem to have any settings you can change.

I really appreciate the international variety of the recipes, as well as the portion sizing that you mention.  But I wish they left out silly things like the Game & Watch thing, as that space could have been used for even more recipes.  For instance, the selection of Russian and Mexican food is pathetic, and the number of American dishes is disappointing considering the size and diversity of the country.

UltimatePartyBearFebruary 23, 2009

Quote:

Cooking simulators have populated the DS since Cooking Mama's success, but the idea of a game that actually teaches you how to cook hasn't hit the mainstream in America.

There was cooking instruction in Portal, but I could never find the fish-shaped toxic waste at the grocery store.

How useful is this app for a cooking neophyte?  Does it show me the difference between chopping and dicing?  If it says "Sweat the onions," can I say "Say what?" and get extra instructions?

Jonny - You can change the microphone sensitivity in the actual DS setup.

UltimatePartyBear - For pretty much every technical cooking term, there is a definition and a way to find out more details about it.
As someone who never really cooked anything outside of grilled cheese and scrambled eggs, I'm having a ball making somethings that I never really thought to make.

You mean in the DS firmware?  I don't recall ever seeing that... interesting.

DrStilesFebruary 23, 2009

I used this software to make a desert (sticky toffee pudding) that turned out great - if you want to learn how to cook new things this is a great tool.  One complaint was that while I was baking the pudding and cooking the toffee simultaneously it would have been nice to have two separate timers - I had to use the oven timer for the pudding.  Also, I made this recipe twice - once with two servings and once with four - and both times I had too much batter left at the end - and the servings were huge as it is!  It seemed like the amount of food per serving size was a little off for this one.

TJ SpykeFebruary 23, 2009

I listened to you talking about this on the podcast (and how you felt embarrassed to take it to the grocery store). It sounds like a interesting application. I don't cook, but I may end up getting this later.

jakeOSXFebruary 23, 2009

i got this, meant to post something about it a while ago.

the grocery list thing was great,

and the Moroccan beef stew rocks, i suggest it highly.

StratosFebruary 24, 2009

Nice review. I have been thinking about getting this for my little sister since she likes cooking. Now that I know you can fix the microphone issue I think its a done deal.

KDR_11kFebruary 24, 2009

So far the only complaint we got was that my father complained how everything seems to contain red wine and that reminded him too much of bunnymeat.

Quote from: Jonnyboy117

and the number of American dishes is disappointing considering the size and diversity of the country.

That may be because America's culture is mostly an amalgamation of the cultures that immigrated and many of the recipes are filed under other countries?

Quote from: DrStiles

I used this software to make a desert (sticky toffee pudding) that turned out great

Oh I remember that one, I was looking for which recipe would have the highest calorie count, the toffee pudding beat everything at 1500kcal, enough to feed a woman for an entire day.

Quote from: KDR_11k

That may be because America's culture is mostly an amalgamation of the cultures that immigrated and many of the recipes are filed under other countries?

NY/Chicago-style pizza, southern casseroles, Texan chili, San Franciscan sourdough, tons of Cajun food, any variety of BBQ, not to mention many interesting Hawaiian dishes... these things may or may not have descended from other countries' cuisines, but Americans have added their own distinct flavors and methods.

And in the realm of the totally obvious... there are no recipes for hamburgers, hot dogs, or apple pie.  There are only 10 recipes for America, compared to 34 for France, 39 for Italy, and 28 for China.

Quote from: nron10

Jonny - You can change the microphone sensitivity in the actual DS setup.

I just checked, and no, you cannot.  If you know a way to change the microphone sensitivity, please tell me in detail, as I would like to change mine.

Ack. I distinctly remember there being an option to adjust the sensitivity in the system's setup, but it's only in specific games.

Modified the blog slightly to make up for my error. Jonny, thanks for keeping me honest even though you're almost completely retired.

Nick DiMolaNick DiMola, Staff AlumnusFebruary 25, 2009

This game rocks. Me and Chessa made Okonomiyaki and Fried Dumplings based on the recipes included, step-by-step, ingredient-by-ingredient, and they both came out fantastic.

We'll definitely be using those recipes again and look forward to testing out others.

YmeegodFebruary 25, 2009

I loved the idea and I think it's still worth the $20 but I found even though it's 250 recipes a bit limited (a few of my fav's didn't make the cut). 

Would love to see MORE.  in fact I wouldn't mind a WII cooking channel or WII Cooking software since the DVD format can hold thousands of recipes and additional info (like how long to cook chicken--brown or cooking to taste wouldn't save you from salmonella). 

I hope nintendo uses my idea of combining both of their products because I'll buy it :). 

BTW:  There's tons of recipes that use Sake too :).

KDR_11kFebruary 26, 2009

The problem for a Wii version would be that you can't put it in your kitchen.

UltimatePartyBearFebruary 26, 2009

You could stream it to your DS, but at that point you might as well cut out the Wii and stream it from the Internet to your DS.

StratosFebruary 26, 2009

Quote from: UltimatePartyBear

You could stream it to your DS, but at that point you might as well cut out the Wii and stream it from the Internet to your DS.

My Aunt has a TV in her kitchen. It's so she won't miss parts of the Super Bowl when she's in there. So her and her and the rest of the small minority could also get Wii's for their kitchen TV and use Cooking Trainer Wii.

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