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
methods for the culinary transformation of foods that contain sugars. Whereas
the Maillard reaction is a reaction of sugars with amino acids or proteins, cara-
melization involves only sugars. It is probable that the two reactions jointly
play a role in the cooking of most foods containing sugars, the share of each
depending on the relative quantities of sugars and proteins.
Although caramelization has influenced the taste and appearance of dishes
ever since sugars were first heated, exactly how these transformations take
place remains a mystery, and an economically important one at that: In France
alone the food processing industry produces 15,000 tons of caramel per year,
which are used in the making of milk, cookies, syrups, alcoholic beverages,
coffee, and soups.
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A Scientic Tradition
The first scientific studies of caramel were done in 1838 by the French
chemist Étienne Péligot. For the next twenty years caramel was consigned to
purgatory, until M. A. Gélis, Charles Gerhardt, and Gerardus Johannes Mulder
proposed in 1858 to divide its nonvolatile component (making up 95% of the
caramelized product) into three parts: caramelan, caramelene, and caramelin.
Nonetheless, these substances, obtained from successive dissolutions with al-
cohol and water, were no more clearly defined, chemically speaking, than the
famous osmazome that Thenard and Brillat-Savarin claimed to constitute the
sapid principle of meats. None of the parts extracted by precipitation is consti-
tuted by a single type of molecule.
Investigation resumed in the early twentieth century. Caramel was then be-
lieved to contain humic acids, poorly understood reducing compounds whose
tanning properties are also found in lignite. The various compounds of the
volatile part of caramel were also discovered, including 5-hydroxymethyl-2-fur-
aldehyde and some twenty other compounds that contribute to its penetrat-
ing odor (including formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, methanol, ethyl lactate, and
maltol).
Subsequently it was observed that caramelan reacts with alcohols. Analysis
of the nonvolatile part nonetheless remained a nagging problem until 1989,
when modern research methods made it possible to detect the presence of a
derivative of glucose.
Water Eliminated
Sucrose is a disaccharide composed of glucose–fructose bonds. Each of
these two subunits has a skeleton composed of six carbon atoms. Five of these
atoms each carry a hydroxyl (–oh) group. The sixth one bears an oxygen atom
attached by a double bond, with a glycosidic bond such as –ch –o–ch – bind-
2
2
ing the two rings. Applying the same methods of analysis they had used in
studying the chemistry of sugars, the Grenoble researchers elucidated the main
features of the chemical transformations of the nonvolatile part of caramel.
Among other things they observed the formation of fructose dianhydrides, in
which two fructose rings are connected by two –ch –o– bonds, which in turn
2
define a third ring lying between them. Several molecules correspond to this
228 | investigations a nd mod el s
description because sugars come in many isomeric forms, which is to say that
molecules having the same atoms can differ if the atoms are linked by differ-
ent bonds.
Finally, the Grenoble chemists showed that during the caramelization of
sucrose, for example, the nonvolatile part results from an initial reaction dis-
sociating the sucrose into glucose and fructose. These elementary sugars then
recombine, forming oligosaccharides having various numbers of elementary
sugars: The glucose may combine with glucose or fructose, the fructose may
react with fructose, and so on.
These recent results are commercially important, for they make it possible
to consider polydextroses—used to give texture to dishes in which sugar is
replaced by intense sweeteners—as naturally occurring compounds. Because
polydextroses are naturally present in caramel, they are not subject to the same
system of regulation as other synthetic molecules. Moreover, the tendency of
various glucides to caramelize can now be investigated more easily.
Caramel
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68
Bread and Crackers
The mechanical behavior of bread resembles that of plastic materials.
l e f t o u t i n t h e k i t c h e n , at room temperature, bread goes stale. Fro-
zen, it seems to change more slowly, but at what temperature must it be kept
in order to stay in the same state as when it comes out of the oven? 7°c (45°f)?
0°c (32°f)? –10°c (14°f)? Physical chemists at the École Nationale Supérieure
de Biologie Appliquée à la Nutrition et à l’Alimentation (ensbana) in Dijon
have sought to answer this question using their knowledge of polymers, which
are very long molecules formed by the linking of subunits called monomers.
This seemed to be a natural approach, for foods contain many polymers: The
molecules that constitute the starch granules in flour are linear or ramified
chains of glucose molecules known respectively as amylose and amylopectin,
proteins are chains of amino acids, and so on.
At high temperatures polymers are in a liquid state because they have suffi-
cient energy to move in a disordered fashion, allowing their mass to flow. When
polymers are cooled, they initially form a rubbery solid in which certain polymer
chains crystallize while preserving the ability to slide past one another. Then, at
temperatures lower than the temperature of vitreous transition, the chains are
immobilized and the material solidifies, with their crystalline parts dispersed in
an amorphous rigid part, or glass. The structure of the solid phase depends on
the cooling. When the cooling is rapid, the viscosity increases too quickly for the
molecules to be able to crystallize, and the vitreous part predominates.
230 |
Thus many foods are kinds of glass: Sugar cooked with water becomes
concentrated with the evaporation of the water and gradually forms a glass;
powdered milk, coffee, and fruit juice sometimes also appear in a vitreous
state. What about a fresh loaf of bread? Is it initially a rubbery solid that then
vitrifies or partially crystallizes as it goes stale? Martine Le Meste, Sylvie Davi-
dou, and Isabelle Fontanet at ensbana studied this question by recording the
mechanical behavior of various hydrate samples as a function of temperature
and comparing the reactions of loaves of bread with those of extruded flat
breads, such as crackers.
When one heats bread dough, which is essentially a mixture of flour and
water, the starch granules in the flour release their amylose molecules into
the water, as we have seen. As the bread cools, the amylose molecules form a
gel that traps the water and the amylopectin. In order to prepare variously hy-
drated breads, the Dijon team first completely dehydrated a series of samples
by placing them for a week in desiccators, where the water was absorbed by
phosphoric anhydride. The samples were then rehydrated under controlled
hygrometric conditions and coated with an impermeable silicone grease. A
viscoelastometer was used to measure the force transmitted by the samples
when they were deformed in a controlled way, yielding a coefficient of rigidity
known as Young’s modulus.
The researchers found that bread remains in a rubbery state as long as the
temperature is higher than the vitreous transition temperature, –20°c (–4°f).
On the other hand, analysis of the vitreous transition temperature as a func-
tion of water content showed that a part of the water does not freeze and that
it plays a plasticizing role.
Freezing Bread
These observations have practical implications. The many results obtained
by polymer chemists allow us to predict the changes in the mechanical proper-
ties of bread and its cousins as a function of their water content, crystallinity,
and so on. Among other things, even if the water that freezes is immobilized,
freezing will not arrest such changes as long as the temperature is higher
than the vitreous transition temperature. At temperatures between –20°c and
0°c (–4°f and 32°f), then, bread continues to undergo structural alteration. To
Bread and Crackers
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preserve bread without compromising its textural characteristics, the freezing
temperature must be lower than the vitreous transition temperature.
The loss of freshness in bread had long been attributed to the phenomenon
of starch retrogradation, in which amylose progressively crystallizes, releasing
its water. The Dijon team observed instead a co-crystallization of amylose and
amylopectin into hydrated crystals. Lipids counteract the loss of freshness that
occurs over time because they bind with the amylose, forming crystals that
retard the co-crystallization of the amylose and amylopectin.
Nonetheless, the firmness associated with stale bread does not result solely
from this co-crystallization. The behavior of the amorphous, or vitreous, re-
gions seems to play a major role. Water is an important parameter in storage,
for it works to plasticize these regions, which in turn affects the rate and type
of crystallization that occur.
232 | investigations a nd mod el s
69
The of Alsace
The openness of the landscape is a crucial factor in winemaking.
t h e w o r l d o f w i n e a n d v i n e so little doubts the existence of differ-
ences in the overall natural environment—the
terroir,
as it is called—of wine-
growing regions that it has made them the basis for awarding protected desig-
nations of origin. Is this justified? Agronomists are accustomed to examining
how the particular features of a given viticultural site—its climate, soils, and
parent rock—affect the growth of its vines. Éric Lebon and his colleagues at
the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (inra) station in Colmar
have studied defined sections of the Alsatian landscape and shown that its
openness is at least as important as its capacity for retaining groundwater and
exposure to sunlight.
Wine growers seek to plant grapevines in conditions that favor the forma-
tion of berries, rather than leaves or branches, and the accumulation of sugars
(for fermentation) and aromas. Berries are able to ripen before the intemperate
weather of autumn causes them to rot only if the vines have begun to grow
early enough. For this reason it was long thought that sunshine was the chief
advantage of good
terroirs
.
At the request of the Centre Interprofessionel des Vins d’Alsace, the Colmar
agronomists continued research that had been begun in the 1970s in the Bor-
deaux region by Gérard Seguin and his colleagues at the Institut d’Œnologie
there. The team led by Seguin analyzed the importance of the soil, and the way
in which it nourishes the vine with water, in promoting the vine’s growth. The
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best
terroirs,
it found, enjoyed a regular supply of water and periods of only
moderate drought, conditions that encourage the early ripening of the grapes.
Beginning in 1975, René Morlat and his colleagues at the inra station in
Angers studied the land in the legally protected red wine–producing vineyards
of the Loire Valley (Cabernet Franc from Saumur-Champigny, Chinon, and
Bourgueil). Their work confirmed the earlier observations and showed that
the more rapidly the soil heats up in the spring, the earlier the vine develops
and the more favorable the landscape is to successful cultivation. The Angers
agronomists suspected that the relevant climatic characteristics could be ana-
lyzed in terms of a landscape’s openness, determined by measuring the angle
of the horizon in relation to a horizontal axis for the eight principal directions
of the compass dial. Vines were supposed to develop differently in a basin,
where the degree of openness is low, than at the top of a hill, where the degree