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
as a function of time, for each temperature, display an elbow shape, which
indicates that the softening consists of two phenomena. The first is rapid and
probably is associated with the diffusion of the water toward the interior of the
lentils; the second is slower and seems to be associated with the gelling of the
starch in the hot water, which causes a starchy paste to form.
The researchers also observed that the percentage of lentils that burst open
during cooking increases exponentially as a function of time as the tempera-
ture rises above 80°c (176°f). Temperature thus affects both the integrity of
the lentils and their firmness: At temperatures above 86°c (187°f), the propor-
tion of lentils that fall apart exceeds the proportion of lentils that become soft
while retaining their form—hence the culinary rule suggested by these studies,
namely that lentils should be cooked at a temperature lower than 80°c (187°f).
Of course, this takes time.
Softening Lentils
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14
Souféed Potatoes
Analysis of a classic dish shows how to avoid the greasiness of deep frying.
s o u f f l é e d p o t a t o e s l o o k l i k e s m a l l, crispy golden balloons. They
are said to have been discovered on August 25, 1837, during the dedication of
the railroad line linking Paris and Saint Germain-en-Laye. The menu for the
official luncheon was to include fried slices of potato, but when the train had
trouble climbing the last hill the chef was forced to interrupt the frying; once
the guests were finally seated, he immersed the slices once again in very hot
oil in order to make them crispy. They puffed up.
Since then cooks have differed over the proper way to make this difficult
masterpiece of classic French cuisine. Physicochemical analysis has recently
illuminated the mechanisms that cause the potatoes to puff up and revealed
how to limit the absorption of oil by the potatoes during frying.
Cookbooks do not say why the recipes they give for souffléed potatoes
should work. It has long been claimed that this dish and the ideal thickness
of the sliced potatoes were studied by the French chemist Michel-Eugène
Chevreul (1786–1889), a pioneer in the chemistry of fats. The story is plau-
sible, given the importance of heated fat in this dish, but I have found no
trace of any such investigation in the works of Chevreul. Four years after
Chevreul’s death, however, chef Auguste Colombié noted in his
Éléments
culinaires à l’usage des demoiselles
(1893), “Thanks to the good offices of M.
Decaux, the gracious and learned laboratory assistant of the late Chevreul,
who kindly furnished me with the necessary thermometers, I was able to
62 |
make three scientific experiments on the puffing up of potatoes, Wednesday
14 April 1884, at the warehouse showroom of the Compagnie Parisienne du
Gaz.” There follow several pages in which Colombié presents the results of
his experiments, with no reference to Chevreul. It therefore seems probable
that historians of cookery have identified Colombié with Decaux and Decaux
in turn with Chevreul.
The Technolo³ of
How should souffléed potatoes be prepared? Most traditional recipes rec-
ommend cutting the potatoes lengthwise into slices between 3 and 6 millime-
ters (1/8 and 1/4 inches) thick. The slices are washed, dried, and then cooked
in oil that has been heated to a temperature of 180°c (176°f). Once the slices
have risen to the surface, after six or seven minutes, they are removed from the
oil and allowed to cool before being put back and cooked a second time, only
now at a higher temperature. The authors of these recipes attribute success to
the thickness of the slices, the length of time between the two immersions, or
the temperature of the oil in each case.
Which is the relevant parameter? Why do the potatoes puff up? How can
this puffing up be optimized? In testing the classic recipes one needs to keep
two things in mind: that potato cells contain granules of starch, which swell
when the cellular water is heated, forming a purée, and that because a potato
is a thermally isolating material, its center is slow to cook. If the oil in the first
round of frying is too hot, an excessively thick and rigid crust forms before the
center is cooked, and the potato will not puff up.
Water Vapor Repels Oil
Next, if we weigh the fried slices, we find that the oil does not replace the
water eliminated by heating, as was long assumed. Given a surface of 100
square centimeters (or roughly 15 square inches), about 80 cubic centimeters
(almost 5 cubic inches) of steam manages to escape per second. In other words,
the pressure of the steam keeps the oil from seeping in. Besides, if the slices
quickly rise to the surface, this is because the water has been replaced by steam
and not by oil (a potato is composed of 78% water and 17% starch, which is
denser than both water and oil).
Souºéed Potatoes
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The behavior of steam bubbles provides the key to the phenomenon of
soufflage
. In order for the slices to puff up, steam must suddenly be generated,
deforming the crust, whose dried-out cells create a steam-resistant compart-
ment within each slice. When vaporization is slow, small trains of bubbles
trickle out through openings in the crust, and the pressure of the steam is
insufficient to cause the slices to expand, hence the need for hotter oil during
the second round of frying.
Puffing up also requires that the compartments formed during the first
round of frying be impermeable. The centers of the slices continue to cook
during the interval between the first and second rounds, and water is redis-
tributed through the dried-out areas. As the temperature falls the crust prob-
ably becomes detached from the center as well. The second round of frying
then causes the residual water in each slice to evaporate, triggering expansion
because the steam has a hard time escaping through openings in the compart-
ment walls.
This explains why the thickness must be carefully controlled: If the slices
are too thin, one does not obtain a crust with an intermediate layer of puréed
starch granules, and the quantity of steam generated therefore is insufficient;
if the slices are too thick, more time is needed for the center to cook and an
overly thick crust forms on the outside, hindering the expansion. It also be-
comes clear why the greatest care must be taken in handling the potato slices.
For if the thin crust is pierced, large vapor bubbles are suddenly able to escape
through the openings, and the pressure is no longer sufficient to cause the
slices to puff up.
Finally, how can the amount of oil absorbed by the puffed potatoes be mini-
mized? Sam Saguy at the University of Jerusalem has shown that the oil is
present mainly on the surface of the sliced potato, in quantities that increase
with the rugosity of the surface and repeated use of the same oil: The more
uneven the surface, the more oil that adheres to it (because of an increase
in tensioactive molecules that results from repeated heating, hence the foam
produced by old oil). It is a good idea, then, to fry potatoes in clean oil, to use
as sharp a knife as possible, and to wipe off any oil coating the surface of the
cooked potato slices so that when the water inside cools and condenses it is
not absorbed.
64 | secrets of the kitchen
15
Preserves and
Preserving Pans
Why are unplated copper pans recommended for cooking fruit preserves?
l e t ’ s e x a m i n e a f e w m o r e d i c t u m s. L.-E. Audot, author of
La cui-
sinière de la campagne et de la ville
(1847), says that in order to make fruit
preserves “it is indispensable to use an unplated copper pan (earthenware
or terracotta ones being liable to burn [the preserves] or impart a bad taste).”
Sixty years later, geologist Henri Babinski, in his
Gastronomie pratique
(1907),
advised, “For preserves made from red fruits, it is preferable to use an enam-
eled pan, which does not transmit any sharp taste, as often happens with
unplated copper pans.” During the same period, professors at the École du
Cordon Bleu recommended that cooks “avoid using any iron or tin-plated
utensil.”
What is one to make of these conflicting opinions? Should copper or enam-
eled cast iron be used? If copper, tin-plated or unplated? Although copper
preserving pans may retain a certain luster that encourages culinary nostalgia
and adds to the aesthetic quality of the kitchens in which they are displayed,
they are also a bother because they have to be thoroughly cleaned (which can-
not be done with ammonia, by the way, because this would give the preserves
a disagreeable taste) before being used. Why not use stainless steel pans or
enameled containers instead? Does copper give better results because of its
superior thermal conductivity? Or does it possess other unsuspected proper-
ties that make it preferable to these alternatives?
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The Role of Copper in Preserves
Nothing beats an experiment. Let’s begin by putting red currants or rasp-
berries in an unplated copper pan. To be rigorous about it, let’s first measure
the pH of the pan’s contents (pH is a measure of acidity running from 0, for
very strong acids, to 14, for very strong bases). The acidity of such fruits some-
times is surprisingly high. Indeed, a pH of about 3—which is to say about as
much as certain vinegars—is not unheard of. Next, tilt the pan and you will
see that the copper has been stripped away by the fruit and its juice. In other
words, the copper ions covering the metal have dissolved.
Do these ions have an effect on the preserves? Let’s conduct another ex-
periment, dividing a previously cooked batch of preserves in a chemically inert
container (glass, for example) and then adding a copper salt to one of the two
halves. When the two portions have cooled, one observes that the one con-
taining copper ions is firmer than the other. Why? Because the solidity of the
preserves depends on the presence of pectin molecules, extracted from the
fruits, which form a network that traps the water, sugar, and fruits. Adding
lemon juice generally promotes gellification because pectin molecules contain
carboxylic acid –cooh groups that, depending on the degree of acidity, may
or may not combine. If the environment is insufficiently acidic, the carboxylic
acid groups are ionized in –coo– form so that the electrical charges they carry
have a mutually repulsive effect; in an acidic environment, by contrast, these
groups are neutralized and the pectin molecules no longer repel one another.
What is the role of copper in all of this? In preserves copper is found in the
form of ions and possesses two positive electric charges that interact with the
two negatively charged groups, causing the pectins to bond with one another.
In other words, copper reinforces the pectin gels, hardening preserves, as ex-
perience shows.
And Tin?
Given that copper is a suitable material, why should the tin that covers
the inner surface of old preserving pans be harmful? Could it be that the old
dictums are nothing more than the worthless residue of empirical advances in
culinary practice? As it turns out, putting red fruits such as raspberries or cur-
rants in tin-plated containers produces no unwelcome consequences. Because
66 | secrets of the kitchen
tin does not act on red fruits, one might suppose that copper is the culprit, but
fruits placed in copper are not altered either.
It is nonetheless generally the case that metals act through their salts. Try
sprinkling a pinch of various metallic salts—silver, aluminum, copper, tin,
iron, and so on—over red fruits. The tin salts immediately cause a disagreeable