world1 outlet covering thisCalibrating

Free tool helps families save money by using food already in their kitchens

First publishedJul 17, 14:16 UTC
Last updatedJul 17, 15:49 UTC · 12m ago
11 outletFox News Latest
1 outlets over time — hover a bar for its window & outletslast updated
Free tool helps families save money by using food already in their kitchens
● Story signals

How strong is this topic?

6.0/10Significanceimpact & urgency
6.0/10Source trustoutlet authority
1Outletsindependent sources

Significance weighs impact, urgency & coverage breadth · Source trust is the outlets' average authority · more outlets means a more confirmed story.

Answer

A teenager recently launched an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered website designed to reduce food waste and help households save money by using what's already in their pantries and refrigerators.Smit Kothari, 17, of Virginia, said he was inspired to create Grocery Genius after watching his family survey the random ingredients they had at home and have no idea what to make."I did some more research, and I found out that many other families have that same exact problem," Kothari told Fox & Friends.TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZThe website enables users to enter information about the food they already have at home into the app. The AI then generates three recipe ideas, along with nutritional information and money-saving tips.There are features to help people plan meals and track their nutrients, including calories and macros.The program is also able to tailor recipes based on dietary restrictions and people's cooking abilities.Grocery Genius includes a "Smart Pantry" feature that lets people track items and receive alerts before food expires, so they can use it or donate it.Kothari said he realized two problems – food waste and hunger – correlate.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER"Some people are letting foods expire, they waste it, while many others are starving," he said.A trip Kothari took to Africa also inspired him to create Grocery Genius."I saw lots of impoverished families who struggled with hunger," he said in an interview with Virginia television station WVEC.

Reported by 1 outlet Fox News Latest. See all sources ↓

A teenager recently launched an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered website designed to reduce food waste and help households save money by using what's already in their pantries and refrigerators.Smit Kothari, 17, of Virginia, said he was inspired to create Grocery Genius after watching his family survey the random ingredients they had at home and have no idea what to make."I did some more research, and I found out that many other families have that same exact problem," Kothari told Fox & Friends.TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZThe website enables users to enter information about the food they already have at home into the app. The AI then generates three recipe ideas, along with nutritional information and money-saving tips.There are features to help people plan meals and track their nutrients, including calories and macros.The program is also able to tailor recipes based on dietary restrictions and people's cooking abilities.Grocery Genius includes a "Smart Pantry" feature that lets people track items and receive alerts before food expires, so they can use it or donate it.Kothari said he realized two problems – food waste and hunger – correlate.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER"Some people are letting foods expire, they waste it, while many others are starving," he said.A trip Kothari took to Africa also inspired him to create Grocery Genius."I saw lots of impoverished families who struggled with hunger," he said in an interview with Virginia television station WVEC. "I've seen that problem firsthand, and I thought that's a big one that I really wanted to focus on."The website describes itself as "your kitchen's smartest assistant," offering "everything you need" to "cook smarter." It's free to use and only requires an email address to sign up.Christopher Tan, president and CEO of the Foodbank of Southeastern Virginia and the Eastern Shore, mentored Kothari while he was developing Grocery Genius."The beauty of this app is it has so many different applications that could help any number of families in need and any number of families who also give to us," Tan told WVEC.CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE NEWS"I can't tell you how many times I've forgotten what's in my pantry. If I have an app that can help me track that and remind me to donate food before it goes to waste, all of that can happen through his app."Grocery Genius won second place in the national Congressional App Challenge, a competition for middle and high school students that encourages them to learn to code and inspires them to pursue careers in computer science."Kothari, who is a rising senior at Ocean Lakes High School, told Fox & Friends that he plans to continue developing Grocery Genius next year as he goes off to college."I've been getting lots of feedback [from] users, and I want to keep enhancing [it]," he said.

Read the full report at Fox News Latest

Why it matters

A world story we're tracking; its significance and source trust firm up as more outlets confirm it.

In brief
What's the story?
A teenager recently launched an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered website designed to reduce food waste and help households save money by using what's already in their pantries and refrigerators.Smit Kothari, 17, of Virginia, said he was inspired to create Grocery Genius after watching his family survey the random ingredients they had at home and have no idea what to make."I did some more research, and I found out that many other families have that same exact problem," Kothari told Fox & Friends.TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZThe website enables users to enter information about the food they already have at home into the app. The AI then generates three recipe ideas, along with nutritional information and money-saving tips.There are features to help people plan meals and track their nutrients, including calories and macros.The program is also able to tailor recipes based on dietary restrictions and people's cooking abilities.Grocery Genius includes a "Smart Pantry" feature that lets people track items and receive alerts before food expires, so they can use it or donate it.Kothari said he realized two problems – food waste and hunger – correlate.CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER"Some people are letting foods expire, they waste it, while many others are starving," he said.A trip Kothari took to Africa also inspired him to create Grocery Genius."I saw lots of impoverished families who struggled with hunger," he said in an interview with Virginia television station WVEC.
How widely is it covered?
1 outlet, average source rating 6.0/10.
When was it last updated?
12m ago.
Different angles across outlets
Coverage map

How outlets are framing the same story

Here's how each outlet is covering the story — compare their headlines and timing at a glance.

  • Coverage card1 outlet
    1Coverage
    Scouting report

    Free tool helps families save money by using food already in their kitchens

    Sources1
    TypeCoverage
    Fox News Latest
Related in the knowledge graph
Sources (1)
Avg source rating 6.0/10
Processing cluster
A1A2A3B1B2B3
Share this article
Summarize with AI (opens AI chat with article URL · Gemini: prompt copied to clipboard)