Read Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor Online
Authors: Hervé This
Tags: #Cooking, #General, #Methods, #Essays & Narratives, #Special Appliances, #Science, #Chemistry, #Physics, #Technology & Engineering, #Food Science, #Columbia University Press, #ISBN-13: 9780231133128
Molecular Gastronomy
a r t s a nd t r a d i t ion s
o f t h e
t a b l e
Hervé This
a r t s a n d t r a d i t i o n s
o f t h e
t a b l e :
p e r s p e c t i v e s o n c u l i n a r y h i s t o r y
Albert Sonnenfeld,
series editor
Salt: Grain of Life
Pierre Laszlo, translated by Mary Beth Mader
Culture of the Fork
Giovanni Rebora, translated by Albert Sonnenfeld
French Gastronomy: The History and Geography of a Passion
Jean-Robert Pitte, translated by Jody Gladding
Pasta: The Story of a Universal Food
Silvano Serventi and Françoise Sabban, translated by Antony Shugar
Slow Food: The Case for Taste
Carlo Petrini, translated by William McCuaig
Italian Cuisine: A Cultural History
Alberto Capatti and Massimo Montanari, translated by Áine O’Healy
British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History
Colin Spencer
A Revolution in Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America
James E. McWilliams
Sacred Cow, Mad Cow: A History of Food Fears
Madeleine Ferrières, translated by Jody Gladding
Hervé This
Molecular Gastronomy
Exploring the Science of Flavor
t r a n s l a t e d b y
m . b . d e b e v o i s e
c o l u m b i a u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s {
n e w y o r k
}
c o l u m b i a u n i v e r s i t y p r e s s
Publishers Since 1893
New York Chichester, West Sussex
Copyright © Éditions Pour la Science 2002.
Translation copyright © 2006 Columbia University Press
All rights reserved
Columbia University Press gratefully acknowledges permission to reprint
excerpts from
The Physiology of Taste
by Jean Brillat-Savarin, translated by
M. F. K. Fisher, copyright 1949 by the George Macy Companies, Inc. Used by
permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
This, Hervé.
[Casseroles et éprouvettes. English]
Molecular gastronomy : exploring the science of flavor / Hervé This ;
translated by Malcolm DeBevoise.
p. cm. -- (Arts and traditions of the table)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
i sbn 0 -231-13312-x (alk. paper)
1. Food --Sensory evaluation. 2. Flavor. 3. Gastronomy.
i. Title. ii. Series.
tx546.t5513 2005
664'.072-- dc22
20050053784
Columbia University Press books are printed on
permanent and durable acid-free paper.
Printed in the United States of America
Designed by Linda Secondari + Vin Dang.
Ferdinand
typeface by Isaac Tobin.
c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
It is not enough to know the principles, one needs to know how to
manipulate
.
—
Dictionnaire de Trévoux,
quoted by michael faraday
in the first edition of
Chemical Manipulation
(1827)
15 Preserves and Preserving Pans •
65
16 Saving a Crème Anglaise •
68
17 Grains of Salt •
71
18 Of Champagne and Teaspoons •
74
19 Coffee, Tea, and Milk •
76
Part Two : The Physiolo³ of Flavor
Contents
20 Food as Medicine •
83
21 Taste and Digestion •
86
22 Taste in the Brain •
88
23 Papillary Cells •
91
24 How Salt Affects Taste •
94
25 Detecting Tastes •
97
26 Bitter Tastes •
100
27 Hot Up Front •
103
series editor’s preface •
ix
28 The Taste of Cold •
106
Language Edition •
1
30 Tenderness and Juiciness •
112
31 Measuring Aromas •
115
Part One : Secrets of the Kitchen
32 At Table in the Nursery •
118
1
Making Stock •
23
33 Food Allergies •
121
2 Clarifying Stock •
26
34 Public Health Alerts •
124
3
Hard-Boiled Eggs •
29
4 Quiches, Quenelles, and
Part Three : Investigations and Models
Puff Pastries •
32
35 The Secret of Bread •
131
5
Échaudés and Gnocchi •
35
36 Yeast and Bread •
134
6 The Well-Leavened Soufflé •
38
37 Curious Yellow •
137
7 Quenelles and Their Cousins •
41
38 Gustatory Paradoxes •
140
8 Fondue •
44
39 The Taste of Food •
143
9 Roasting Beef •
47
40 Lumps and Strings •
146
10 Seasoning Steak •
50
41 Foams •
149
11 Wine and Marinades •
53
42 Hard Sausage •
152
12 Color and Freshness •
56
43 Spanish Hams •
155
13 Softening Lentils •
59
44 Foie Gras •
158
14 Souffléed Potatoes •
62
45 Antioxidant Agents •
161
46 Trout •
164
77 Champagne and Its Foam •
257
47 Cooking Times •
167
78 Champagne in a Flute •
260
48 The Flavor of Roasted Meats •
170
79 Demi Versus Magnum •
263
49 Tenderizing Meats •
173
80 The
Terroirs
of Whisky •
266
50 Al Dente •
176
81
Cartagènes
•
269
51 Forgotten Vegetables •
179
82 Tea •
272
52 Preserving Mushrooms •
182
53 Truffles •
185
Part Four : A Cuisine for Tomorrow
54 More Flavor •
188
83 Cooking in a Vacuum •
279
55 French Fries •
191
84 Aromas or Reactions? •
282
56 Mashed Potatoes •
194
85 Butter: A False Solid •
285
57 Algal Fibers •
197
86 Liver Mousse •
288
58 Cheeses •
200
87 In Praise of Fats •
291
59 From Grass to Cheese •
203
88 Mayonnaises •
294
60 The Tastes of Cheese •
206
89 Aioli Generalized •
297
61 Yogurt •
209
90 Orders of Magnitude •
300
62 Milk Solids •
212
91 Hundred-Year-Old Eggs •
303
63 Sabayons •
215
92 Smoking Salmon •
306
64 Fruits in Syrup •
218
93 Methods and Principles •
309
65 Fibers and Jams •
221
94 Pure Beef •
313
66 The Whitening of Chocolate •
224
95 Fortified Cheeses •
316
67 Caramel •
227
96 Chantilly Chocolate •
319
68 Bread and Crackers •
230
97 Everything Chocolate •
322
69 The
Terroirs
of Alsace •
233
98 Playing with Texture •
325
70 Length in the Mouth •
236
99 Christmas Recipes •
328
71 Tannins •
239
100 The Hidden Taste of Wine •
331
72 Yellow Wine •
242
101 Teleolfaction •
334
73 Wine Without Dregs •
245
74 Sulfur and Wine •
248
gloss ary •
337
75 Wine Glasses •
251
further reading •
35 1
76 Wine and Temperature •
254
index •
361
viii | contents
Series Editor’s Preface
“It takes a tough guy to raise a tender chicken!” the late Frank Perdue
used to proclaim in his radio and t v advertisements. Physical chemist Hervé
This (pronounced teess), the internationally controversial molecular gastro-
nome, explains to us in understandable yet precise terms the science of ten-
derness.
What defines tenderness, anyway? How does one achieve it in the farmyard
and the kitchen? What chemical interactions give a chicken the potential to be
a gourmet chicken? How is tenderness perceived by the complex nerve end-
ings and taste buds of the mouth? The current cult of “Slow Food” may have a
basis in molecular science, or it may be mere Walden Pondish Romantic Rous-
seauism. After reading this absorbing book I now know what I mean when I
sing, “Try a little tenderness!”
Hervé This combines the seriousness of purpose and acumen of a respect-
ed scientist (Collège de France) with the aura of dynamic t v personality. He
succeeds more than others in making what seems recondite to some accessible
to all. We worry about making good French fries; here we read that there is
laboratory predictability in the choice of potato variety, the slicing technique,
and the discoloration that occurs when enzymes in the air hit the uncooked
spud. Each scientific food inquiry raised in this book takes root in specific
everyday (and useful) examples, the whys and wherefores of our very real culi-
nary dilemmas as home cooks and consumers.
| ix
Should one salt a steak before, during, or after cooking? We must under-
stand the chemical processes and consequences of that common ritual. How
does the shape of the wine glass affect the taste of a given wine? Science gives
us real answers. Our molecular gastronome could use equations, but instead
he uses words, readably, eloquently, and wittily.
How to cool down a drink that is too hot? Cool your almost-boiling morn-
ing Java with cold milk and it will take ten minutes, but wait for the coffee to
reach 75°f, then add the milk, and one obtains the same result after only four
minutes.
And your
espresso ristretto
(black)? One would think that the energy deflec-
tion of the metallic spoon and the diluting effect of sugar would be dramatic.
Blowing on the brew proves to be more efficient by half than stirring, even
though I had always thought that spreading the heat would lead to more rapid
cooling.
The era of culinology, a useful term immediately trademarked in our prof-
it-driven culinary culture by a group called Research Chefs of America, has
clearly arrived. How timely, then, is the publication of
Molecular Gastronomy
,
the liveliest addition to the growing bibliography exploring culinary science.
I might also cite the work of the Monell Chemical Senses Institute and the
books of such distinguished scholars as Peter Barham, Harold McGee, and
Robert L. Wolke.
Hervé This explores the chemistry, physics, and technology of produce cul-
tivation and selection, food preparation (cooking, freezing), tasting, and diges-
tion in his pioneering t v shows and acclaimed magazine articles. His labora-
tories at the Institutes for Advanced Research and the seminars he codirects
at the Collège de France have attracted many of the celebrity chefs to whose
kitchens people flock on pilgrimages of culinary initiation.
This book is as much about the science of eating and enjoying food as about
the science of its preparation. How does the brain perceive flavor and decide it
is good, and how do we detect textures? Is chewing healthful or even necessary
for gastronomic enjoyment? How does breaking down foods by mastication
alter their chemistry and release flavors? Study the effect and techniques of
flavoring and chewing gum, asserts our media-friendly gastronome, and you’ll
understand.
One of the most fascinating debates in current food science revolves around
the so-called fifth taste, umami. We had been taught that salty, sweet, sour, and
x | preface
bitter are the four taste sensations. As so often happens, new insights come
from Asia.