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
depending on what assumptions you make about the size of the bubbles and
the type of protein coating.
Why, then, does one generally wind up with only a small cubic decimeter
of foam? There’s no shortage of air, so the problem must once again be a lack
of water. If you add some water to an egg white and whisk you will find that
the volume of the foam increases, and if you keep on beating the mixture
vigorously you will eventually end up with several liters of meringue. This
version is less stable than the classic preparation, however. The stability of a
foam depends on the viscosity of the liquid (which is reduced by the addition
of water) and the size of the bubbles (which determines the action of capillary
forces between the bubbles).
Extreme Flan
The fact that emulsions and foams are both dispersed systems suggests
that other such systems found in cooking may display the same behavior. Con-
sider what happens in the case of a quiche. First one lines a baking pan with
dough and fills it with cubes of bacon and a mixture of eggs and milk. Yet the
cook who skimps on eggs (perhaps because they cost more than the milk)
sometimes ends up adding so much milk that the quiche remains liquid after
cooking. Because milk is mostly water, the question now becomes: How much
water can we add to an egg and still obtain the equivalent of a flan?
Orders of Magnitude
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Let’s suppose that the proteins responsible for coagulation are spherical.
In the course of coagulating they can be assembled either in a compact fash-
ion, so that no water is trapped between them; or next to one another along
the edges of a very large cube that encloses a maximum amount of water; or
along the edges of a network that, for the sake of simplicity, may be assumed
to be cubic.
In the first case, the volume of water enclosed is zero. In the second case,
a simple calculation shows that the volume would be impossibly large, on the
order of several cubic meters. Let us therefore consider an intermediate case,
based on observation of a fried egg using an atomic resolution microscope.
This time, an order-of-magnitude calculation leads to a volume of flan—what
physical chemists call a gel—equal to a liter.
To check this calculation experimentally, take an egg and add to it an equal
volume of water, and then heat the mixture. Having successfully obtained
a flan by this method, repeat the experiment while progressively increasing
the quantity of water: twice the original volume, three times, and so on. You
will discover that almost three-quarters of a liter of water can be made to
“gelatinize” with a single egg—the same order of magnitude predicted by the
calculation.
The number of different types of dispersed systems is huge. So far we have
explored a liquid dispersed in a liquid, a gas dispersed in a liquid, and a solid
dispersed in a liquid. But other combinations remain to be investigated.
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Hundred-Year-Old Eggs
Experiments with acids and bases.
e g g s u s e d t o b e p u t i n s a n d , s a w d u s t , o r w a x in order to be
preserved. Asian peoples devised recipes that took advantage of aging, instead
of compensating for its effects, in order to create what were variously known
as hundred-year-old eggs, centenary eggs, and even thousand-year-old eggs—
names that symbolized links with the past as well as longevity. How credible
are these recipes from the chemical point of view? A few experiments reveal
the unexpected behavior of eggs in acid and basic environments.
The origins of the Chinese art of preserving eggs are lost in the mists of
time. Initially, eggs seem to have been immersed in juices extracted from a
local tree. Then it was discovered that by putting them in a mixture of ashes
and earth and keeping them in a dark, cool place one could obtain the same
culinary result but in only ten to twelve weeks. What inspired these practices?
Can others be imagined?
Recipes for hundred-year-old eggs vary from region to region in China.
Some call instead for placing duck eggs in a plaster that contains various ingre-
dients: lime, saltpeter, bicarbonate of soda, mud, fragrant herbs, tea, rice straw,
and so on. The eggs are left to rest for at least three months, and their flavor
is said progressively to improve. It is surprising to note that some of these
ingredients are also used in parts of France; even more recent civilizations
such as our own make use of lime and ashes, which contain potash (potassium
hydroxide). Thus recipes for preserving eggs fall into two classes: ones that
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contain only eggs and others that put them in contact with an alkaline com-
pound. What is the effect of these bases? The effect of acids? After all, at least
one modern French recipe also advises placing quail eggs in vinegar.
An Egg in Vinegar
Let’s experiment by placing a whole egg, in its shell, in a large transparent
container. When it is covered with white vinegar, bubbles soon escape from
the shell. Why? Because the acetic acid of the vinegar is attacking the calcium
carbonate? A lighted candle, placed in the container, eventually goes out, a sign
that the acid gives off carbon dioxide, which, being denser than air, accumu-
lates in the container, driving out the air (the same thing can be demonstrated
more technically by collecting the gas in limewater, which becomes cloudy).
Then, after half a day or so, a thin, red surface layer detaches itself from the
shell. This is why the eggs have a pink shell: the white of the carbonate and
the red of this layer combine to produce the final color (at least in the case of
French eggs; I have heard that eggs in England remain white).
Let’s continue observing. After one or two days of slow gaseous emis-
sion, the egg seems to have gotten bigger. Is this merely an illusion? The
sequence of events shows that the enlargement is real: The final volume
can be more than twice the initial volume. The shell has been completely
dissolved, but the contents of the egg have not spread into the vinegar, for
the acidity causes the white to coagulate. Experiments with several eggs al-
lowed to sit for different periods of time show that this coagulation, limited
at first to a thin outer layer, extends to an increasing proportion of the albu-
men, reaching even as far as the yolk. On reflection, this effect is not entirely
surprising, for one finds the same thing when one pours vinegar on an egg
white in a bowl: The superficial layer of the white coagulates, among other
reasons because the h+ ions contributed by the acid prevent the acid groups
of the proteins from being ionized while triggering the ionization of the base
groups, which thus become positively charged (bases have the opposite ef-
fect). Electrical repulsions between the charged groups of proteins thus un-
fold the proteins, which are then bound by forces called disulfide bridges
that link sulfur atoms. Coagulation occurs because water is trapped by the
resulting network of proteins.
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Osmotic Expansion
If the dissolution of the shell and the coagulation of the albumen are simply
explained, it may seem less clear why dilation occurs. Could it be that osmosis
is responsible for the increase in size? Water molecules tend to go from areas
where they are most concentrated to areas of least concentration. Whereas the
water concentration is about 95% in the vinegar, it reaches only 90% in the
egg white. Moreover, whereas the acetic acid migrates toward the interior of
the white (this can be verified by measuring the acidity of an egg white that has
sat for several weeks in vinegar), the protein molecules dissolved in the water
of the whites are too large to pass through the coagulated membrane. In other
words, the water of the vinegar enters into the albumen, increasing the water
concentration inside the egg.
To show that this is what happens, one has only to leave the eggs in an
acetic acid solution whose acid concentration is greater than 10%. Once again
the shell is dissolved, but this time the egg ends up being smaller because the
osmosis is reduced. How would an egg placed in a concentrated solution of
chlorhydric acid turn out? One would obtain the same smaller egg produced by
the acetic acid solution, but the coagulation would be more rapid and clearer.
The Floating Yolk
I invite you to conduct your own experiments; many other surprises await
those who are patient enough to observe carefully. For example, when the shell
is dissolved and the egg white is still translucent, you can actually see the yolk
floating in the white.
As for bases, adding caustic soda (sodium hydroxide) to an egg white causes
it initially to coagulate. A chemical reaction produces a nauseating sulfur gas,
and the egg then turns clear again. Obviously the soda dissociates the proteins
after having first precipitated them. If we put eggs in ashes or in lime, which
have lower pH levels, we can wait—for a hundred years.
Hundred-Year-Old Eggs
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92
Smoking Salmon
Sugar and an electrical eld can be used to accelerate smoking.
s m o k e d s a l m o n i s a n e x p e n s i v e d e l i c a c y that France has long
specialized in producing. Manufacturers buy imported salmon and resell their
smoked filets the world over. A team of researchers from the Institut Fran-
çais de Recherche pour l’Exploration de la Mer and the Centre de Coopération
Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement perfected
the process currently used to accelerate processing without sacrificing flavor.
The two principal ingredients of the new method are osmosis and electrostatic
smoking.
Smoking, like salting and drying, was originally used to preserve foods.
In all three cases the idea was to eliminate water from foods in order to kill
microorganisms that were already present and to prevent the development of
new pathogenic microorganisms. Yet the old methods often gave an excessively
salty or smoky flavor.
With the appearance of modern refrigeration systems, the technique of
smoking was retained, in a modified form, because it gave filets of fish (and
other foods) the delicious taste we know and love. Present-day products are less
salty and less smoky, but they must be kept at low temperatures, between 0°c
(32°f) and 2°c (36°f).
Fish filets prepared by traditional methods are either immersed in a brine,
sprinkled with salt, or injected with brine. The first treatment, which takes
about four hours, eliminates only about 2% of the water; health regulations
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make it a complicated affair requiring costly treatment facilities. The elimina-
tion of water is ensured only by drying at a temperature of about 22°c (72°f),
with a humidity of 65%, for three to four hours, before the actual smoking
begins. Here again the procedure must be carefully monitored, for the process-
ing temperatures favor the development of microorganisms.
In the procedure patented by Antoine Collignan, Camille Knockaert,
Anne-Lucie Wack, and Jean-Luc Vallet, the salting and drying are done si-
multaneously at a temperature of 2°c (36°f). The filets are immersed in a
concentrated salt and sugar solution (10–30% sugar and 70–90% salt) so that
some of the salt penetrates the flesh by osmosis and dries it out. In fact, the
various molecules are distributed in such a way that their concentration is
everywhere the same: When the filets are immersed in a salt-saturated solu-
tion, the salt migrates toward the flesh and the water comes out. At the same
time the sugar—composed of large molecules that cannot enter the cells of
the fish—promotes the outflow of water as well. All told, filets immersed in
a solution containing some 350 grams of salt per liter and about 1900 grams
of sugar per liter lose roughly 10% of their water. Moreover, the sugar reacts
with the amino acids of the fish and produces agreeable flavors through a
series of Maillard reactions. In certain classic recipes for smoked salmon the
fish is rubbed with sugar until it has a tanned appearance. With the new pro-
cedure, the result is comparable but easier to achieve because it takes place
in solution.
Smoke Without Fire
After rapid rinsing and draining, the smoking takes place in a chamber tra-
versed by a metal conveyor belt that passes under a grate. Smoke is produced
by subjecting sawdust to pyrolysis (dry heat). The smoke is injected into the
chamber after having been cooled to a temperature of 40°c (104°f), condens-
ing the aromatic polycyclic hydrocarbon molecules, which are carcinogenic, so