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
these compounds are dissolved when it is filled with champagne. Although
they do not disturb the wine’s effervescence, they do affect the stability of the
foam, causing the bubbles to burst when they reach the surface. Dishwashing
liquid, though also harmful, is less of a problem because rinsing eliminates
most of it.
262 | investigations a nd mod el s
79
Demi Versus Magnum
Champagne ages more quickly in small bottles.
t h e m a g n u m o f c h a m p a g n e is a prince among princes: Connoisseurs
ascribe virtues to it that they do not detect in regular or half-bottles of the same
wine. Are they correct? And are they correct in supposing that champagne
should be stored lying down because the cork remains moist and so better
preserves its hermetic properties? Experiments performed recently by Michel
Valade, Isabelle Tribaut-Sohier, and Félix Bocquet at the Centre Interprofessi-
onnel des Vins de Champagne (civc) in Épernay led to a new understanding
of the role of corks in the aging of sparkling wines.
Champagne is a wine that foams, by contrast with still wines, in which the
presence of bubbles is considered almost a flaw. Why does champagne foam?
Because the yeast put into the wine consumes its sugar, releasing carbon diox-
ide in the space enclosed by the bottle. This gas is then dissolved in the liquid,
causing it to bubble when the cork is popped. Along with the bottle itself, the
cork is the key to preserving the qualities of a good champagne because it en-
sures that the wine retains its gas.
Cork Scrutinized
For a long time it was supposed that corks are perfectly hermetic. After
all, the wine does stay in the bottle. The wine, yes, but not the gas: As oe-
nologists well know, bottles of champagne lose their pressure over time. This
| 263
phenomenon led them to examine the behavior of corks more closely. In cham-
pagne making, before the familiar mushroom-shaped cork is inserted, produc-
ers use crown caps equipped with a temporary seal that can be removed to add
sugar. This seal comes in either cork or plastic (a synthetic polymer derivative).
The civc team studied the two types of material and found that cork seals were
not uniformly impermeable, which explains the variations that are observed
from bottle to bottle.
Synthetic seals displayed a consistently higher degree of impermeability,
but this fact alone does not establish that they are the best device for block-
ing the escape of gas. However, tasting juries have unanimously found that
wines with plastic stoppers change less quickly and have less of the cooked
fruit taste that is often associated with oxidation. This raises a series of ques-
tions. Why does oxidation occur in the first place? Does oxygen diffuse through
the stopper? Does the surface area of the stopper in relation to the volume of
liquid explain the differences tasters detect between half-bottles, bottles, and
magnums?
Tests of Aˆng
An impression—even a highly educated one—is not the same thing as
a controlled experiment. To determine whether the size of the bottle really
makes a difference, the Épernay oenologists compared samples of the same
champagne, drawn and bottled under identical conditions, and plugged in the
classic fashion using crown caps with cork seals. Then, after a year of aging,
they submitted the wines to the judgment of a panel of tasters. Consistent
with earlier results, the wine in the magnums seemed younger than that in
the regular (75-centiliter) bottles, and the wine in these bottles seemed less
developed than that in the half-bottles.
Could these differences have resulted from a chemical reaction between
the wine and the oxygen present in the small volume of gas trapped when the
bottle was capped? No, for measurements showed that the oxygen trapped in
this volume and subsequently dissolved in the wine is completely consumed
by the yeast, leaving only a residue of nitrogen and carbon dioxide.
Are the changes in the wine caused by a gaseous exchange with the atmo-
sphere outside the bottle despite its being plugged with a cap? Measurements
showed that the quantity of oxygen that enters through the stopper during
264 | investigations a nd mod el s
aging is proportionally greater when the capacity of the bottle is small: Al-
though the quantity of oxygen is roughly identical for the three types of bottles,
the smaller the bottle, the smaller the volume of liquid that reacts with this oxy-
gen. This is the advantage of the magnum: The larger the bottle, the less effect
oxidation has on the wine. But even if it is clear why carbon dioxide manages to
escape the bottle, why does oxygen get in? Because its partial pressure outside
the bottle (about a fifth of an atmosphere) is greater than the partial pressure
inside the champagne (equal to zero).
The Position of the Bottle
As for the position in which a bottle is kept after it has been purchased, this
has no influence at all—except on the cork, whose mechanical properties are
better preserved when the bottle is standing rather than lying down. More pre-
cisely, the force needed to extract the cork is greater in this case, with the cork
reassuming its mushroom shape on being removed from the bottle. When the
wine is in contact with the cork, by contrast, it gradually penetrates the cork
and alters its mechanical properties.
Finally, the civc team explored the influence of the moon on the increase
in sugar in grapes before harvest. Preliminary findings confirmed what had
long been suspected: It has no effect whatever.
Demi Versus Magnum
| 265
80
The of Whiskey
Statistical analysis provides guidance in scotch tasting.
s c o t l a n d , b l e s s e d l a n d o f w h i s k e y ! There it is called scotch, and
there are several kinds. Single malts are made from fermented barley at a
single distillery; blended whiskeys are mixtures of different kinds of whiskey
that may come from different parts of the country. Obviously the single malts
are preferred by connoisseurs, who scrutinize them with regard to five crucial
qualities: nose, color, body, mouth, and finish.
Does the provenance of a single malt determine its organoleptic qualities?
If it does, can types of scotch be associated with particular environments (or
terroirs
)? To find out, François-Joseph Lapointe and Pierre Legendre at the Uni-
versity of Montreal analyzed data collected by taster Michael Jackson, who has
described, tasted, and judged the roughly 330 single malt whiskeys produced
by 109 of the most prestigious distilleries in Scotland.
Characteristics of Single Malts
Statistical analysis of single malts proceeds from the fact that their dis-
tinctive characteristics assume several forms. Thus the nose may be aromatic,
peaty, light, sweet, fresh, dry, fruity, grassy, salty, sherry-flavored, spicy, or rich.
The body may be smooth, medium, full, round, honeyed, light, firm, fat, and
so on. What is the best way to divide the population of single malts into groups
of analogous individuals in order to determine whether they come from the
266 |
same
terroir?
The University of Montreal statisticians simplified the problem
by considering only one scotch per distillery, for a total of 109 samples.
To quantify the various sensory impressions, or characteristics, produced
by these scotches, they assigned to each one a value of 1 if it was present in a
single malt and 0 if not. They then displayed the statistical data in the form
of a table by arranging the individual scotches in rows and the characteristics
in columns.
Next they calculated the numerical distance between pairs of single malts
by dividing the number of characteristics common to the two whiskeys by
the total number of characteristics identified in either one of the two; the
distance between them therefore is equal to 1 minus this parameter. The set
of these distances was then used to form a new matrix, where the value of
a given compartment represents the distance between two whiskeys linked
with one another by row and column. The smaller this distance, the closer
the whiskeys to each other.
In order to classify individual whiskeys, Lapointe and Legendre partitioned
the population by aggregating the closest individuals in pairs. This aggregate
is then considered to be a new individual that replaces the two aggregated in-
dividuals, whose characteristics are averaged to arrive at the value of the new
individual’s characteristics. Proceeding in this fashion until all individuals
have been related to one another as members of a single family, one winds up
with a dendrogram (or tree diagram). Different partitions can be obtained by
making a “cut” at a given distance from the root: The nearer to the root the cut
is made, the smaller the number of classes.
In Search of Class
The dendrogram obtained for single malts divides into two branches. On
one side are golden whiskeys having a dry, smoky body. On the other are amber
whiskeys that have a light body, smooth in the mouth with a fruit finish. The
first group, consisting of 69 whiskeys, was then subdivided into amber scotch-
es, which are full-bodied, fruity, fat, and spicy, and golden scotches, which have
a smooth and light body with a grassy finish. The farther away one goes from
the root, the smaller the groups.
Let’s come back to the geographic component. Scotland is divided into three
scotch-producing regions: the Highlands, the Lowlands, and the Isle of Islay.
The
Terroirs
of Whiskey
267
These three regions are divided into thirteen districts. The researchers con-
structed a new table in which the 109 scotches were again arranged by row and
column. The compartment at the intersection of a row and column contains a
0 if the corresponding scotches are from the same district, otherwise a 1.
Comparing this matrix with the one that generated the dendrogram, one
observes that the division into regions of production corresponds to the tree
diagram division, whether six or twelve groups are considered. These groups
correspond to
terroirs
. What is more, this distribution confirms that the water,
soil, microclimate, temperature, and overall environment are indeed the deter-
mining factors of the characteristics of single malt whiskeys, as upholders of
the
terroir
theory maintain. The secrets and traditions of individual distillers
account for only small differences by comparison.
Finally, the Canadian researchers sought to relate the five types of character-
istic to one another. It was clear that nose, color, body, and mouth are not inde-
pendent characteristics: The color of a scotch is related to its nose and its body,
and the nose is related to the mouth and, to a lesser degree, the body. The fin-
ish, on the other hand, which is to say the impression that is left in the mouth
when one has finished drinking, depends on neither the nose, the mouth, the
body, nor the color. The familiar method of tasting that consists of spitting out
the beverage after its color, nose, body, and mouth have been judged therefore
is open to criticism because it neglects a fundamental parameter.
268 | investigations a nd mod el s