Archive for March, 2009
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

For this month’s “They go really well together” event (TGRWT #16) hosted by Supernova Condensate I decided to leave the chicken untouched and focus on the rose component. I had long wanted to try Chad’s Lemon whip (which I’ve included in Texture) where lemon juice is thickened with xanthan and then whipped to a thick foam after addition of methyl cellulose. I started with water, a little sugar and about 10 g of rose water. Having added xanthan and methyl cellulose I tasted it and decided to double the amount of rose water, add some more sugar and add a little lemon juice for acidity. I can imagine that rose water comes in differents strengths so it’s advisable not to add all from the start.
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Tags: apple, celery, chicken, foam, methyl cellulose, metil, molecular gastronomy, rose, texturas, texture, xanthan
Posted in flavor pairing, hydrocolloids, molecular gastronomy, recipe, TGRWT | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

The International Journal of Gastronomy and Food Science (IJGFS) is planned for launch this year. Elsevir is mentioned as a publisher, but there is currently no further information on the Elsevir website. The journal is initiated by AZTI-tecnalia, a Spanish technology center specializing in marine and food research, in collaboration with ALICIA, a Catalan research centre focusing on technological innovation in kitchen science and the dissemination of agronourishment and gastronomic heritage. The restaurant Mugaritz and the websites aliment@tec and Ciencia y gastronomia also have their logos on the IJGFS website. The objective of the journal is to “fill the gap in the expanding fields of Gastronomy and Food Science, by adopting a scientific approach”.
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Tags: Alicia, AZTI, Elsevir, food science, gastronomy, IJGFS, journal, molecular gastronomy, practical molecular gastronomy, science enabled cooking, technology
Posted in academic articles, molecular gastronomy, websites | 4 Comments »
Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Hervé This has launched a new website: Travaux de Hervé This. As with his two blogs it’s difficult to follow unless you speak French. But at the same time it’s hard to get around Hervé since he’s a pioneer in the field! Machine translation of the French websites is available from Babelfish and Google, but the translations still leave a lot to be desired.
Tags: french, Hervé This, molecular gastronomy
Posted in molecular gastronomy, websites | Comments Off
Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

I recently stumbled across an interesting article on risk perception: If It’s Difficult to Pronounce, It Must Be Risky – Fluency, Familiarity and Risk perception. Researches from the University of Michigan had students read lists of fictious words and imagining that they were reading food lables and judge the hazard of each ingredient form very safe to very harmful. The words were divided in groups of easy-to-pronounce words (such as Magnalroxate) and difficult-to-pronounce words (i.e. Hnegripitrom). If I were to take the test I’d probably rank Magnalroxate as worse than Hnegripitrom – the “roxate” somehow reminds me of a pesticide or something like that. It turned out however (as expected) that substances with difficult-to-pronounce names were perceived as more harmful than substances with easy-to-pronounce names.
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Tags: DHMO, iupac, molecular gastronomy, risk, risk perception, systematic name, trivial name
Posted in fun with food, molecular gastronomy, science, websites | 8 Comments »
Friday, March 13th, 2009

There’s a new book by Hervé This available in English: Building a meal – From Molecular Gastronomy to Culinary Constructivism. In the book he examines six bistro favorites — hard-boiled egg with mayonnaise, simple consommé, leg of lamb with green beans, steak with French fries, lemon meringue pie, and chocolate mousse — and discusses the chemistry of the preparation and the eating of these dishes. I haven’t seen the book yet, but it seems to be something like In search of perfection meets On food and cooking. I’ve also had troubles finding the original French title for this one. There is an excerpt chapter covering consommés available from the publisher website.
Tags: Hervé This, molecular gastronomy
Posted in books, molecular gastronomy, science | 3 Comments »
Monday, March 9th, 2009

The next TGRWT challenge has been announced: chicken and rose! Head over to astrophysics blog Supernova Condensate and read more on how to participate in round 16. And do check out the excellent summary of the dark chocolate and smoked salmon contributions from TGRWT #15 over at Mex Mix.
Tags: chicken, molecular gastronomy, rose
Posted in flavor pairing, hydrocolloids, molecular gastronomy, recipe, TGRWT | 10 Comments »
Sunday, March 1st, 2009

The TGRWT #15 challenge was to pair smoked salmon with dark chocolate. I decided to encase a piece of hot-smoked salmon in a cocoa gel and serve it with sugared slices of lime. But as you can see from the pictures quite a lot went wrong… But it tasted quite nice!
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Tags: agar, chocolate, cocoa, fish, hysteresis, molecular gastronomy, salmon, smoked
Posted in flavor pairing, hydrocolloids, molecular gastronomy, recipe, TGRWT | 6 Comments »