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
tion. Their hydrosoluble part can react with oxygen as well.
Proof by Reaction
At the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique station in Nantes,
Gilles Gandemer, Anne Leseigneur, and their colleagues studied the role of
phospholipids in triggering Maillard reactions in simplified systems. To an
aqueous solution of cysteine (an amino acid chosen because it contains a sulfur
atom and creates molecules crucial for the formation of the aroma of cooked
meat) and ribose (a sugar known for its activity in cooking that can be released
in nucleotides) they added either fatty acids found in phospholipids (linoleic
acid, palmitic acid, and ethanolamine) or the principal phospholipids in meats
(phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine), producing concentra-
tions of various molecules comparable to those found in meats. These mix-
tures were then heated to 140°c (284°f).
Because the products of Maillard reactions are too numerous to be test-
ed in a controlled way, chemists have sought instead to study changes in
The Flavor of Roasted Meats
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chromatographic profiles, focusing on the heterocyclic compounds, which
have a meaty taste, and on the products of lipid oxidation. Observing the ap-
pearance of new peaks on the chromatograms and the falling off from certain
peaks generated by systems modeled without lipids, the chemists were able
to confirm that phospholipids have a greater effect than triglycerides. They
also showed that the aromas of cooked meat caused by phospholipids arise
mainly from two effects: a fatty note created by the presence of carbonylated
compounds (which contain the c = o chemical group), the result chiefly of the
oxidation of fatty acids, and the interaction of lipids and their degradation prod-
ucts with the direct and intermediate products of Maillard reactions, which
leads to the synthesis of a few new molecules and a reduction in the formation
of other compounds.
It was also known that the nonvolatile products of Maillard reactions impede
the oxidation of lipids. Further analysis showed that the odors of the modeled
systems resulted more from a disturbance of Maillard reactions than from lipid
oxidation. Although lipids do not come into contact with compounds dissolved
in the aqueous phase, phospholipids, because of their polar head, are partially
soluble and can react with the intermediate products of Maillard reactions.
172 | investigations a nd mod el s
49
Tenderizing Meats
Why a meat that is well suited to boiling is not good for roasting.
m e a t i s a g r e e a b l e t o e a t o n l y w h e n it has been aged for a sufficient
period of time. After an animal is slaughtered its meat begins to toughen (for
twenty-four hours in the case of beef). This toughness can be reduced by as
much as 80% by aging, which lasts for several days (ten in the case of beef).
Can this period be shortened, or is it at least possible to determine the mini-
mum amount of time needed to preserve carcass and muscle so that a given
cut of meat will be properly tenderized? Ahmed Ouali and his colleagues at
the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (inra) station for meat
research in Clermont-Ferrand analyzed the characteristics of muscle tissue in
order to predict the length of time needed for aging different kinds of meat.
The first stage in the transformation of animal muscles into meat is the
onset of cadaveric rigidity. Muscle cells continue to contract and relax imme-
diately after death because they still contain adenosine 5´-triphosphate (atp), a
molecule that stores energy. The chemical cycles of muscle cells regenerate atp
for a certain time, but when it is produced only by the degradation of glycogen
(which serves as a reserve supply of glucose) the muscle is no longer able to
relax and remains in a contracted state.
During this phase the degradation of glycogen and glucose produces lactic
acid, whereas the degradation of atp releases phosphoric acid, with the result
that the muscles are acidified. The swiftness of acidification depends chiefly
on the type of muscle: Red (or slow-contracting) muscles, which derive their
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energy from oxygen carried by the blood, are acidified less and less quickly
than white (or fast-contracting) muscles, which do not consume oxygen, mak-
ing them more vulnerable to alteration by microorganisms.
Tenderizing and Degradation
The conditions under which cadaveric rigidity occurs determine the course
of the next phase, tenderizing, which probably results from the degradation
of structural elements. A distinction has long been made between the sort
of toughness associated with collagen (the protein that sheathes muscle cells,
grouping the muscle cells into bundles and the bundles into muscles) and the
sort associated with myofibrils (the proteins responsible for the contraction of
muscles). It has recently been observed that collagen, which is mostly unaf-
fected by the tenderizing process, provides an index, or baseline, for measur-
ing toughness. Collagen varies according to its concentration in muscles and
determines the preferred cooking method for different cuts of meat. Pieces
with high concentrations of collagen are best boiled, whereas ones with low
concentrations of collagen are better suited to roasting.
Two types of mechanisms seem responsible for tenderizing myofibrils. Cer-
tain proteolytic enzymes decompose proteins, breaking down the filaments
and fibrils, and an increase in osmotic pressure dissociates the constituent
proteins of the filaments.
The inra biochemists studied three groups of enzymes capable of de-
grading myofibrillar proteins: cathepsins, calpains, and a complex of proteins
known as proteosomes, less well known than the other two because it has only
recently been discovered. The activity of these enzymes in muscles depends
on acidity, the concentration of calcium ions and atp, and so on. In living
animals it is limited by various inhibitors that prevent the decomposition of
muscles, but enzymatic regulation is suppressed after slaughter, largely as a
consequence of acidification. Furthermore, the increase in the osmotic pres-
sure of muscle cells that occurs after death facilitates and reinforces the action
of the enzymes: The accumulation of small molecules and free salts in the in-
tracellular liquid dissociates the protein complexes, permitting the proteolytic
enzymes to penetrate to their substrates more easily.
The sensitivity of myofibrils to proteolytic enzymes greatly varies according
to the type of muscle. The myofibrils in red muscle, for example, differ greatly
174 | investigations a nd mod el s
from the ones in white muscle. These differences have to do not only with
the identity of the myofibrillar proteins but also with the structure and exten-
sion properties of the myofibrils themselves: The more rapidly the muscles
contract, the more rapid their enzymatic alteration. This observation explains,
at least in part, the well-known relationship between the age of cattle at the
time of slaughter and the tenderness of their meat after aging. The aging time
ranges from 4–5 days for calves to 8–10 days for steers because the muscles of
the older animals are redder than those of the younger ones.
Understanding these mechanisms will allow government researchers and
commercial food technologists to concern themselves with the tenderness
and, more generally, the quality of meat and to incorporate these properties
in the criteria they apply, which today are geared mainly to shortening the
time needed for animals to reach maturity. One of the chief objections to this
practice is that the very white meat of animals subjected to artificially acceler-
ated growth is also less flavorful and less juicy than the meat of animals from
the same breed that have been raised by traditional methods. What is needed
above all is patience.
Tenderizing Meats
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50
Al Dente
The right way to cook pasta.
a n y on e w h o p u t s s p a g h e t t i i n h o t w a t e r for ten minutes or so
and expects a good result is bound to be disappointed. Simple though it is, the
cooking of pasta raises a number of questions. The first has to do with salt:
Must it be added to the cooking water and, if so, why? Is it really necessary to
add oil to the cooking water? How can pasta be prevented from sticking?
At home one can quickly make good pasta from scratch by mixing flour
(usually made from wheat, but corn or chestnut flour may also be used), a bit
of salt, water, oil, and eggs. Long kneading gives body to the pasta, which is
then rolled and cut up before being cooked for three to six minutes. During
cooking the starch granules absorb water and expand, and the proteins in the
egg and flour form an insoluble network that binds the starch granules tightly
together, limiting the extent to which they are washed into the cooking water.
Cooks can prevent homemade pasta from sticking by increasing the propor-
tion of egg. If the protein network is formed before the starch swells up, the
pasta remains firm during cooking and doesn’t stick; if the starch swells up
before the protein network forms and the pasta is cooked, part of the starch
(chiefly one of two types of molecule called amylose) has time to diffuse in the
cooking water, so that the surface of the pasta is coated with the other type of
molecule (amylopectin) and its strands stick together. After straining, a chunk
of butter or a bit of olive oil will keep the hot pasta from sticking on the plate.
176 |
To improve commercial manufacturing techniques, Pierre Feillet, Joël
Abecassis, Jean-Claude Autran, and their colleagues at the Institut National
de la Recherche Agronomique (inra) Laboratoire de Technologie des Céré-
ales in Montpellier sought to determine which proteins give pasta its distinc-
tive culinary qualities.
Hard-Grain Wheat Gluten
Commercial producers make pasta from hard-grain wheat. In the absence
of egg the protein network is formed by proteins in the wheat and, more
precisely, in its gluten. If one takes the mass obtained after kneading flour
and water for a long time and then rinses it under a stream of running water,
the elastic matter that remains is composed of gluten proteins. Because this
substance is more abundant in hard wheats than soft ones, laboratories such
as the one in Montpellier are interested in the composition and genetic vari-
ability of hard-wheat proteins and in methods of making of pasta that favor
the formation of a protein network.
The quality of a good commercial pasta is judged by its yellow-amber
color and its culinary properties, which is to say the likelihood that it will
not stick after cooking (or even after being slightly overcooked). Plant ge-
neticists therefore have looked to develop hard wheats with firm and elastic
gluten. The inra biochemists showed that this latter characteristic is as-
sociated with the presence of a particular protein, gamma-45 gliadin, com-
mon to varieties of hard wheat that are rich in glutenins of low molecular
mass.
The Montpellier team also investigated the optimal conditions for making
pasta and showed that drying it at a high temperature (about 90°c [194°f]) as-
sists the formation of a network of proteins that is more rapidly insolubilized
during cooking. This heat must be applied at the end of the drying process
in order not to damage the starch granules. Kneading the dough and pulling
it through an extrusion press with the aid of an Archimedean screw must
also be done in such a way that these granules are preserved. The application
of high temperatures acts on the color because it inactivates both lipoxygen-
ases (enzymes that destroy yellow pigments) and peroxidases (enzymes that
darken organic material).
Al Dente
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Oil, Water, and Acidity
How, then, should pasta be cooked? The first thing to keep in mind is that
the proportion of proteins must be high. If hard wheat is not used then one
must add eggs to develop the gluten network or else patiently work the dough
and carefully roll it out, using enough water to hydrate the proteins so that
they are able to bind together. Whatever its composition, pasta must be put
into boiling water so that cooking time is reduced and loss of starch content
minimized.
Is there any reason to add oil to the cooking water? Batches of spaghetti
that have been overcooked, either with or without the addition of oil, show no
differences with regard to stickiness as long as the pasta does not pass through
the surface layer of oil at the end. Oil is useful mainly because it coats the pasta