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From Heating to Recreating: Rethinking Ready-to-Eat Food Systems4
https://www.yujye.net/en/ Yujye Technology
Yujye Technology No. 25, Ln. 57, Zhengnan 1st St., Yongkang Dist., Tainan City 710, Taiwan (R.O.C.)
https://ctinews.com/news/items/yDa2d5qNnK Today, the real challenge in the food and beverage industry is no longer about whether there are customers, but whether there are still people available to run the business. With declining birth rates, shifting work values, and structural changes after the pandemic, labor is no longer a resource that can be easily replaced. Employees are less willing to accept long hours with low pay, and while leaving a job has become easy, hiring replacements has become increasingly difficult. Many businesses are not closing because of poor sales, but because they simply cannot sustain their workforce. In this environment, the logic of running a restaurant has fundamentally changed. In the past, labor shortages could be solved by hiring more people. Today, even if you want to hire, you often cannot find anyone. Once a gap in manpower appears, it does not just affect one shift—it impacts the entire operation, from food quality and service speed to overall revenue, often creating a downward spiral. This is where “Meet Noodles” comes in. Its role is not to replace people, but to support the areas where labor is most difficult to maintain. Whether it is late-night hours, off-peak periods, or unexpected staff shortages, it ensures that operations can continue smoothly. When human labor becomes the most unstable factor, a stable system becomes the foundation of sustainable business. In the future, the businesses that survive will not necessarily be the biggest or the fastest-growing, but those that can maintain stable operations despite an uncertain labor environment. “Meet Noodles” exists to make that possible. https://www.yujye.net/en/hot_533549.html Not a Demand Problem, but a Staffing Crisis: The New Reality of the Restaurant Industry 2026-05-18 2027-05-18
Yujye Technology No. 25, Ln. 57, Zhengnan 1st St., Yongkang Dist., Tainan City 710, Taiwan (R.O.C.) https://www.yujye.net/en/hot_533549.html
Yujye Technology No. 25, Ln. 57, Zhengnan 1st St., Yongkang Dist., Tainan City 710, Taiwan (R.O.C.) https://www.yujye.net/en/hot_533549.html
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2026-05-18 http://schema.org/InStock TWD 0 https://www.yujye.net/en/hot_533549.html
【佑傑電子智慧設備整合啟動!見你一麵AI餐飲 × 工業級乾燥機 × 全自動販賣機,打造無人餐飲與智慧製程新時代! YUJYE Smart Integration – AI Cooking × Industrial Drying × Automated Vending for the Future of F&B! 佑傑スマート統合始動!AI調理 × 産業用乾燥機 × 自動販売機で新しいスマート飲食時代へ!】

Turning a Bowl of Noodles into a Replicable System

We are not making instant noodles.
We are transforming a bowl of food into a system that can be consistently replicated.

In developing our vegetarian soup noodles, our goal was straightforward:
not to create something merely edible, but to deliver a bowl that feels like it was freshly cooked.

Because the real issue with most vegetarian ready-to-eat products is not convenience —
it is that they do not feel like actual cuisine.

Textures break down. Broth lacks depth.
And without animal-based fats, flavor retention becomes even more challenging.

1. From Heating to Recreating the Cooking Process

We abandoned conventional methods such as boiling water or microwave heating.
Instead, we developed a multi-stage composite heating process.

Through testing, the results were clear:

– Single-stage heating → soft, overcooked noodles and flat broth
– Multi-stage heating → restored elasticity and preserved flavor layers

The final process consists of three stages:

  1. Pre-heating (reactivating the noodle structure)

  2. Core heating (complete cooking)

  3. Stabilization (locking in texture and flavor)

The outcome is not simply “heated food,” but a completed dish.

2. The Real Challenge: Moisture Control

The key breakthrough was not the machine itself, but moisture control.

During development, we observed:

– Excess moisture → structural damage after freezing
– Insufficient moisture → dry and rigid texture after reheating



Our solution:

Noodles are prepared in a semi-cooked state with internal moisture retained before freezing.
Meanwhile, the broth is enhanced through increased vegetable extraction and solid content, compensating for the absence of animal fats.

This is what determines whether the final product truly resembles a freshly prepared dish.

3. Why Three Separate Components

A common question is why the product is separated into noodles, broth, and ingredients.

The answer is simple:
to preserve the integrity of the cooking process.

Combining them would result in:

– Reduced shelf life
– Flavor interference
– Premature texture degradation

This is not packaging — it is an extension of the cooking logic.

4. Consistency Over Craft Dependency

For operators, the real challenge is not whether a dish can be made once,
but whether it can be made the same way every time.

This system ensures:

– No dependency on chefs
– No variability from staffing conditions
– No inconsistency in taste

It turns culinary quality into a reproducible outcome.

5. Redefining Vegetarian Food Service

This is not just a product — it is a shift in how vegetarian food is delivered.

It is particularly impactful for:

– Religious institutions (temples, community dining)
– High-volume vegetarian catering
– Consumers with limited access to quality vegetarian options

Their shared challenges are clear:

Limited manpower, inconsistent quality, and time constraints.

This system addresses them by enabling:

– 24/7 availability
– Consistent quality
– Reduced labor dependency

Vegetarian food is no longer confined to a kitchen-based model.
It can now operate as a system.

If you’re interested in learning more, feel free to connect or reach out.