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
66; in process of smoking fish, 307;
resilin proteins, 133
seasoning meat before cooking, 50–52,
ribose, 171
71, 72; and time for water to boil,
Richard, Hubert, 162
71–72; varieties of, 94
Robillard, Bertrand, 258
satiation, sensation of, 86, 87, 98
Roper, Stephen, 100, 101, 102
sauces: avoiding lumps in, 146–47; Chavi-
Roquefort Chantilly, 298–99
gnol Chantilly, Roquefort Chantilly,
Rousselot-Paillet, Dominique, 158
etc., 298–99, 329; as emulsions, 17;
Rousset-Akrim, Sylvie, 158
flour for thickening, 196; keeping
roux, avoiding lumps in, 146–47
hot, 195; thickening caused by starch,
Rumford, Count (Benjamin Thompson), 4
194–95
saucisson
, 152
sabayons (
zabaglione
), 215–17
sausage, 152–54
saccharine, 86
Schaeffer, Alex, 235
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
(brewer’s yeast),
science of food, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 16
134
scotch whiskey, 266–68
Sacchi, Bartholemeo (Platina), 3
Scoville, Wilbur, 104
Saguy, Sam, 64
sea hair, 198
Sailland, Maurice Edmond (Curnonsky),
sea lettuce, 198
237, 282
searing meat, 11, 48
Saint-Pierre, Bernard, 245
second messengers, 92
salad dressings, migration of odorant mol-
sedimentation of particles, 26–28
ecules, 144–45
Seguin, Gérard, 233
salad greens: effect of salt on lettuce, 73;
Semur, Jean-Paul, 288
packaged and ready-to-eat, 182
separating funnel, 293
salicylhydroxamic acid, 57
shallots, “aioli” from, 297
saliva and salivation: action of enzymes
single malt scotch, 266–68
on Sauvignon Blanc grape, 236–38;
skills in cooking, 7
conveying molecules to taste receptors,
smoking salmon, 306–8
206; function in mastication, 109, 110;
sodium bicarbonate, for softening lentils,
tannins’ effect on, 239;
see also
taste
60
receptors
sodium, causing metabolic changes, 87
Salles, Christian, 206
sodium metabisulfite, 57
salmis de canard
, 188, 189
sotolon in
vin jaune
(yellow wine), 242–44
Index
| 373
soufflage, 62, 63
coffee, 76–77; as glass, 231; optimizing
souffléed potatoes, 62–64
concentration for syrups, 218–20; in
soufflés: broiling top before baking, 40;
smoking fish, 307;
see also
sweetness
cooking in vacuum-expanded state,
sulfites: prevent darkening of fruits or veg-
281; heating from below, 17, 33; ques-
etables, 57–58; in wines, 57–58, 248, 249
tion of expansion, 38–40
sulfoquinones, 57
sourdough, 134
sulfur dioxide, 57, 248
sous vide
cooking.
See
low-temperature
surface energy, of champagne glass, 261
cooking
surimis, 42
soy sauce, in marinades, 54
suspensions: as dispersed systems, 143; as
Spanish hams, 155–57
emulsions, 292
sparkling wine.
See
champagne
sweetness: altered by salt, 94–96; species-
spätzle, 35
specific sensitivity to, 83–84;
see also
spiciness (hot): acclimatization to, 104–5;
sugar
reasons for enjoyment of, 103–4
Swift, Jonathan, 11
Spiro, Michael, 272, 273
syringe, for injection of juice into meat, 49
spoilage, preventing, 161–63, 306–8
syrups, optimizing sugar concentrations,
starch: as amylose and amylopectin, 146,
218–20
194; density of, 36; fava bean paste,
288; gelling to paste or purée, 61, 63;
Taillevent (Guillaume Tirel), 73
in liver mousse, 288–90; in pasta, 176;
Talon, Régine, 152, 153, 154
preventing aromas, 143; retrograda-
tannic acid as marinade, 54
tion, 231; for stabilizing emulsions, 45;
tannins: diminishing astringency of wines,
swelling in water, 131;
see also
flour
239–41; effect on saliva, 111; in soil
steak, searing of, ii, 48;
see also
beef
eaten by monkeys, 85; in wine, 54, 111
steaming of meats, 167–68
tartaric acid, 45
steam, in souffléed potatoes, 63–64
tartrate deposits in wine, 245–47
stock: aromatic compounds introduced,
taste receptors: activation by calcium ions,
284; clarifying, filtering, 26–28,
101; advantage of weak bonds, 92, 97;
279–80; early experiments with, 4;
brain’s processing of information from,
making, 23–25; question of salting be-
88–90; and digestion, 86; elusiveness,
fore cooking, 72; question of starting in
97; excitement of neurons in, 91; four
cold water, 11; reabsorption by cooked
classically recognized tastes, 86–87, 88;
meat, 25
innervation by cranial nerves, 107–8;
Strecker degradations of amino acids, 156
lateralization of taste perception, 90;
Streptococcus thermophilus
, 209
molecules changed by saliva, 206; pair-
sucrose, 228, 229
ing with G-proteins, 92, 98; receptor
sucrose octaacetate, 101
proteins in, 84, 88; saliva, 206; salt
sugar: caramel, 227–29, 283; for cooling
stimulating, 94; similarity to receptor
374 | inde x
cells in eye, 92; teleolfaction and tele-
terpenic glycosides, 331, 332
gustation, 334; and tongue’s thermal
terpenols, 331, 332
variations, 106–8; vr1 channel, 104,
terroirs
: affecting flavor of cheeses, 203–5;
105;
see also
aromas; aromatic com-
of scotch whiskey, 266–68; uniqueness
pounds; odorant molecules; olfaction;
and protected designation of origin,
saliva and salivation
203–5, 233; of winegrowing regions of
tasting: Curnonsky’s aphorism on, 237,
Alsace, 233–35
282; liver mousse, 289; as subjec-
Tessié, Justin, 149, 150, 151
tive activity, 200; tests of goat cheese,
texture: attempts to classify, 201–2; of
206–8; tests of single-malt scotches,
cheeses, 201–2; of foie gras, 159–60;
266–67
granularity, 289; relationship to flavor
taxifoliol, 240
and aroma, 142, 289, 290; relation-
Taylor, Andrew, 115, 116
ship to mastication, 112; of stored
tea: cooling before drinking, 77–78;
mushrooms, 183–84; studies of beef,
plaques on surface of, 272–74
112–13
teaspoons: for cooling coffee, 77; “tea-
thaumatin, 84
spoon effect” and pressure in cham-
thermal tastes, 106–8
pagne bottles, 74–75
thermogenesis, 87
technology of cooking: distinguished from
thermometers, 31
science, 2, 3; thermometers, 31
Thibault, Jean-François, 221, 223
teleolfaction and telegustation, 334
thiols, 249–50
temperature considerations: behavior of
This, Hervé, ix, xi
polymers, 230; of boiled eggs, 31; boil-
Thompson, Benjamin (Count Rumford), 4
ing points of liquids, 10; bread and
Tilley, Katherine, 132
cracker storage, 230–32; heat capacity,
tin pans, 66–67
10; low-temperature cooking, 168; tem-
Tirel, Guillaume (Taillevent), 73
pering of chocolate, 224–26; thermom-
Tomas, Anne, 209
eters, 31; for whipping Chantilly cream,
tomato consommé, 280
319; wines and champagnes, 254–56;
Tominaga, Takatoshi, 248, 249
see also
cold storage
tongue: effect of thermal variations,
tempering of chocolate, 224–26
106–8; parts non-specific to particular
tenderizing meat: by marinating, 53–55; by
tastes, 102; parts specific to particular
proper aging, 173–75
temperatures, 107; receptor proteins in
tenderness of beef: effects of aging, cold
papillary cells of, 84, 88;
see also
taste
storage, and cooking temperature, 113,
receptors
114; perceived as juiciness, 112–14
transamination, 317
tenderness of cooked eggs, 31
transducins, 92, 93
tensioactive molecules, 143, 210–11, 258,
Tribaut-Sohier, Isabelle, 74, 263
259, 294, 320
triglycerides, 171, 172, 225, 286
Index
| 375
Trochon, Éric, 52
Viard, A., 4–5
trout: Brillat-Savarin on frying in olive
Viarouge, Claire, 86
oil, 9; optimization of gel formation,
vinaigrettes, 144–45
43; proteins in muscle tissue, 41–42;
vin de fleur
or
vin de voile
, 242
studies of causes of variable quality,
vin de paille
, 243
164–66
vinegar: adding to pasta cooking water,
truffles, 185–87
178; drinkability with addition of sugar,
Tuber melanosporum
(black truffles),
140; as ingredient of marinades for
185–86
meat, 54, 55; preserving eggs in, 304–5
tuberous chervil, 179, 180
vin jaune
(yellow wine), 242–44
turkey, 329
violets, aroma of, 283
tyrosine, 132
Visser, S., 317
vitamin C (ascorbic acid), 56, 133, 161
Ueda, Ryuzo, 53, 54
vitamin E, 161
umami: identification of receptor for, 97–
volatile compounds.
See
odorant molecules
99; from onions and tomatoes, 283;
vr1 protein, 104, 105
so-called fifth taste, x–xi, 86–87
utensils.
See
kitchen equipment
Wack, Anne-Lucie, 307
wakame, 198
vacuum packing: of fruits and vegetables,
Wal, Jean-Michel, 121, 122
57; and low-temperature cooking, 168
water: boiling point of, 10; distilled, for
vacuum pumps, 280–81
filmless tea, 273; in emulsions, 292;
Valade, Michel, 74, 263
evaporation during cooking, 33; hard-
Vallet, Jean-Luc, 307
ness of, 60; needed for foaming of
vanilla, 163
sabayon (
zabaglione
), 215–17; polluted,
vanillin, 163
pectins as detergent for cleansing, 222;
Varoquaux, Françoise, 60
quantity “gelatinized” by one egg, 302;
Varoquaux, Patrick, 60, 191
reabsorption by cooked meat left in, 25;
vats or barrels for wine aging, 270, 271
with sodium bicarbonate for softening
vegetables: algae, 197–99; Brussels
lentils, 60; vaporization during baking
sprouts, 198; cooked in salted water,
of soufflés, 38, 39, 40
73; hybrids, 181; introduction of novel
waterjet/vacuum pumps, 280–81
varieties, 179–81; preferred by children,
Weisfred, Eduardo, 28
119–20; preventing discoloration in,
Westermann, Antoine, 280
56–58; sea hair, 198; sea lettuce, 198;
wheat flour: hard-grain, 177; understand-
wakame, 198;
see also
potatoes
ing behavior of, 131–33
Ventanas, Jesús, 155, 156
whisk, 6
Vercauteren, Joseph, 239–41
whiskey, 266–68
Viallon, Christine, 153
wine: as aid to mastication, 111; Alsatian, 7;
376 | inde x
chilling or bringing up to room tem-
252; length of time in mouth, 237–38;
perature, 254–56; effects of sulfur in,
role of enzymes in saliva, 236–38;
248–50; in fondue, 44–46; in mari-
Sauvignon Blanc, 236–38
nade, 53, 54; in reductions, 284; soto-
Wong, Gwendolyn, 91
lon in
vin jaune
(yellow wine), 242–44;
storing bottles lying down, 263–65;
xanthan, 144
sulfited, 57–58, 248, 249; tannins di-
minishing astringency of, 239–41;
see
yeast: fermentation of, 134–36; keto acid,
also
champagne
244; producing carbon dioxide bubbles,
wine glasses, 251–53, 260–62
131; and sulfur compounds, 249; in
wine making: filtration, 258; improving
winemaking, 237, 242
with glucose, 283; intensifying grape
yellow wine (vin jaune), 242–44
flavor with enzymes, 331–33; noble rot,
yogurt, 7, 12, 153, 209–11
243; stabilizing and preventing tartrate
Yvon, Mireille, 316, 317
deposits, 245–47;
terroirs
of Alsace,
233–35; vats versus barrels, 270
zabaglione
(sabayons), 215–17
wine tasting: intervals of sips and sniffs,
zucchini, “aioli” from, 298
Index
| 377
Molecular Gastronomy
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