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
trolled conditions therefore has only a limited effect on characteristics other
than color.
From Grass to Cheese
| 205
60
The Tastes of Cheese
Lactic acid and mineral salts ˆve goat cheese its distinctive taste.
a r o m a s a r e t h e s t a r s o f t h e f o o d i n d u s t r y : Many firms produce
and sell them to the large food processing conglomerates that make yogurts,
soups, sauces, and so on. Nonetheless, foods that are aromatic and little else
please only the nose, for they are lacking in taste—hence the interest in taste
molecules, still poorly understood. Do these molecules exert the same effect in
foods as in water solution, where their properties have long been studied? At
the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique Laboratoire de Recherches
sur les Arômes, in Dijon, Christian Salles, Erwan Engel, and Sophie Nicklaus
studied this question in connection with goat cheese.
As food is chewed, saliva conveys taste molecules to receptors in the papil-
lae. The Dijon physical chemists sought to analyze the behavior of these mole-
cules in water-soluble compounds, which is to say in the aqueous part of foods.
In the case of cheese this phase consists chiefly of lactose (a sugar), lactic acid
(formed from lactose by microorganisms in the course of fabrication), mineral
salts, amino acids, and peptides (short chains of amino acids). Although the
taste of most of these compounds is known, their effects in combination are
not. Some of the compounds in the aqueous part of the milk used to make
cheese mask the effect of other sapid molecules; others (known as enhancers)
augment their effect.
Salles and his colleagues first tested solutions containing only compounds
whose presence had been detected in the aqueous phase of goat cheese. Be-
206 |
cause peptides cannot easily be identified, the chemists isolated them from
the hydrosoluble part yielded by 20 kilograms (44 pounds) of cheese. After
centrifugation they separated out the juice by a series of ultrafiltrations using
membranes permeable by molecules of a mass lower than 10,000, then
lower than 1,000, and finally lower than 400. The unfiltered residue was
peptides.
All Except One
To evaluate the effect of the various compounds on each of the five basic
tastes, a jury of sixteen judges compared the reconstituted aqueous part to a
solution with the same components except for one or more compounds that
were deliberately omitted. These omission tests were performed under rig-
orous conditions, with anonymous products, individual booths, red light to
prevent bias due to color, and so on. Each taster was equipped with a nose clip
in order to eliminate the perception of odors. After training the tasters were
instructed to rank each of the five tastes by comparison with a specific refer-
ence solution for each sample presented.
Salts, Not Peptides
The first sensory evaluations came as a surprise. Although many studies
had offered glimpses of the sapid properties of peptides, suggesting that they
have a bitter taste, the peptides in goat cheeses turned out to have no dis-
cernible effect on taste, direct or indirect, regardless of their molecular mass.
Though not excluding the possibility that these compounds might one day be
shown to have a sapid effect in the case of other cheeses, the Dijon team dis-
counted an effect by peptides on the taste of goat cheese.
Comparing solutions containing lactose with ones from which it had been
removed, the researchers found that this compound had no effect on the sa-
pidity of the model solutions either. The amino acids likewise turned out to be
tasteless. However, lactic acid and mineral salts were found to powerfully con-
tribute to taste. The acidity of the cheese resulted principally from hydrogen
ions released by the phosphorus and lactic acids, an effect enhanced by sodium
chloride. In the presence of salt, then, the sour note is pronounced. Why? The
question has yet to be answered.
The Tastes of Cheese
| 207
The salt taste resulted from the effect of sodium, potassium, calcium, and
magnesium chlorides as well as of sodium phosphate. A part of the bitter
taste came from calcium and magnesium chlorides, although it was partially
masked by sodium chloride mixtures and by phosphates. As for the sweet and
umami tastes (the latter caused by monosodium glutamate, widely used in
commercial soups and sauces), they were so weak that the researchers were
unable to associate them with any of the hydrosoluble compounds tested.
An Overall Taste
The main conclusion to be drawn from these studies, apart from the de-
tailed information they yield regarding the various compounds contained in
the hydrosoluble part of the cheeses, is that no taste can be attributed to the
action of a single compound. Further complicating matters is the fact that the
different sapid compounds have both inhibiting and enhancing effects on one
another. On the other hand, we now know which compounds must be added
to cheeses in order to reinforce certain tastes or to mask others. Producers may
find it difficult to incorporate such compounds, however, not only for legal
reasons but also because a large proportion of the molecules dissolved in the
milk would be lost during drainage. Nonetheless, gourmets may now amuse
themselves by sprinkling their cheeses with various salts and raising toasts. To
your chlorides! To your phosphates! To your tartaric acid!
208 | investigations a nd mod el s
61
Yogurt
A smoother product can be obtained by modifying its milk composition and
fabrication process.
h o w d o e s o n e m a k e a g o o d y o g u r t ? The question is poorly posed,
for some like their yogurt runny and others like it firm. Ideally what one would
want to be able to do, then, is to balance the composition of milk and the meth-
od of fabrication in a way that will yield a specific texture and taste. Achieving
this objective will take some time, but already Anne Tomas and Denis Paquet
of the Danone Group, together with Jean-Louis Courthaudon and Denis Lori-
ent of the École Agro-Alimentaire in Dijon, have shown that the texture of
yogurt depends on the microstructure of the milk, which varies according to
the concentration of proteins and fats.
The best way to understand the difficulty of the problem will be to make
some yogurt ourselves. Put a tablespoon of commercial yogurt in some milk
and heat it gently for a few hours. The milk sets—or, as a physical chemist
would say, a gel has formed.
Milk is an emulsion, which is to say a dispersion of fat globules and aggre-
gates of casein (protein) molecules in water, in which various molecules such
as lactose are dissolved. When one adds yogurt to this emulsion, one is sowing
it with bacteria—
Lactobacillus bulgaricus
and
Streptococcus thermophilus
—that
transform the lactose into lactic acid. This process of fermentation acidifies
the liquid environment and triggers the aggregation of casein micelles in a
network that traps the water, fat globules, and microorganisms, which in the
meantime have proliferated.
| 209
Textures to Order
Unless a great many precautions are taken, yogurt produced by this method
is disappointing. A bit of home experimentation will show why. Sowing two
identical samples of milk with different yogurts yields different textures and
tastes. Similarly, when the milk is curdled with the aid of glucono-delta-lactone,
a molecule that progressively acidifies the environment in which it is placed,
a still different result is obtained. What is more, causing the milk to curdle at
two different temperatures gives different results as well.
Entertaining though they may be, these experiments are not enough to sat-
isfy the needs of the food processing industry, which is obliged to make consis-
tently good products—hence the crucial question posed at the outset. For want
of an answer that would put an end to further research, the chemists at Danone
and in Dijon restricted their attention to the problem of composition: Given
that commercial producers make yogurt from milk that is fortified by the ad-
dition of powdered milk, condensed milk, and various milk constituents, how
does the composition of this milk determine its microstructure and therefore
that of the yogurt made from it?
Because of the variability of these products, the chemists examined emul-
sions of fixed composition that were prepared by processing a mixture of milk
fats and skimmed milk in a microfluidizer (which injects the mixture under
pressure into a clear small-diameter tube). Analysis of the light diffused by the
various emulsions indicated the size of the fatty droplets.
A Su‡iciency of Proteins
Contrary to what prior studies had suggested, the size of the fatty globules
did not change with the concentration of fat and protein; what had appeared to
be an increase in the size of the droplets, when the proportion of fat is raised,
turned out to be only an aggregation of globules of the same size. Naturally
the number of droplets grows when the concentration of fatty matter increases,
but the proteins are always sufficiently numerous to coat the fatty globules and
emulsify them.
Because proteins are not the only molecules that are tensioactive—that is,
capable of adhering to the surface of fatty droplets, so that one part is in con-
tact with the fat and the other with the water—the Danone and Dijon chemists
210 | investigations a nd mod el s
studied the changes produced by adding other kinds of tensioactive molecule
to emulsions that had already been formed and to mixtures that were subse-
quently emulsified with the aid of the microfluidizer.
It was expected that molecules with the greatest affinity for fat and water
would preferentially attach themselves to the surface of the fatty globules, but
experiments showed that this is not the case as long as the tensioactive mol-
ecules are put into the mixture before it is emulsified. When the tensioactive
molecules are added to an already constituted emulsion, the milk proteins that
coat the fatty droplets are not disturbed by these molecules, and their degree
of aggregation is unchanged. By contrast, when the tensioactive molecules are
introduced at the outset of emulsification, the distribution of the proteins is
altered and the degree of aggregation is reduced.
As a result of this research, the prospect of creating new kinds of diet
yogurt with the same smooth texture as high-fat ones no longer seems quite
so remote.
Yogurt
| 211
62
Milk Solids
How to gelatinize milk without destabilizing it.
s l o w l y , o v e r c e n t u r i e s , c o o k s l e a r n e d to make solid foods from
liquid milk. Cheeses are milk “preserves,” made by destabilizing milk and
eliminating the water it contains in the form of whey. Yogurt is obtained by
heating milk fermented by the bacteria
Lactobacillus bulgaricus
and
Strepto-
coccus thermophilus
. These microorganisms transform the principal sugar in
milk, lactose, into lactic acid, which in turn acidifies its liquid environment and
causes a network to form throughout the liquid, creating a gel.
In recent years fermentation and curdling methods have been improved,
and the texture of yogurt is now known to be determined by the particular pro-
cedure used to solidify its milk constituents. This discovery has made it pos-
sible to create new milk products. With the aid of gelatinizing and thickening
compounds used to make sauces, for example, milk-based desserts have been
invented. But unexplained accidents have occurred: When gelatin is added to
hot milk, for example, the result often is a disagreeable lumpiness. Jean-Louis
Doublier, Sophie Bourriot, and Catherine Garnier, at the Institut National de
la Recherche Agronomique station in Nantes, have shown that excessive con-
centrations of thickening and gelatinizing agents of all kinds have the effect of
destabilizing milk.
At first sight this seems a surprising result, considering the varied char-
acter of these agents. Gelatin is an extract of animal bones, starches are pres-
ent in grains and tubers, carrageenans and alginates are derived from algae,
212 |
galactomannans (guar and carob gums) come from seeds, pectins come from
plants, and xanthan gum is obtained from fermented starch.
Destabilizing Sugars
The chemical analysis of these different compounds revealed common fea-
tures. With the exception of gelatin, all of them are polyosides, compounds of
the same chemical family as the sugars; the numerous hydroxyl (–oh) groups
found in these molecules are responsible for the thickening of solutions by