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The Kitchen as Laboratory: Reflections on the Science of Food and Cooking

Edited by Cesar Vega, Job Ubbink, and Erik van der Linden

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January, 2012
Cloth, 336 pages, 67 halftones, 11 tables
ISBN: 978-0-231-15344-7
$29.95 / £19.95

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Case for Science Inspired by the Kitchen, by César Vega, Job Ubbink, and Erik van der Linden

1. The Science of a Grilled Cheese Sandwich, by Jennifer Kimmel

2. Sound Appeal, by Malcolm Povey

3. Mediterranean Sponge Cake, by Cristina de Lorenzo and Sergio Laguarda

4. Spherification: Faux Caviar and Skinless Ravioli, by César Vega and Pere Castells

5. Konjac Dondurma: Designing a Sustainable and Stretchable “Fox Testicle” Ice Cream, by Arielle Johnson, Kent Kirshenbaum, and Anne E. McBride

6. Stretchy Textures in the Kitchen: Insights from Salep Dondurma, by Tim J. Foster

7. Moussaka as an Introduction to Food Chemistry, by Christos Ritzoulis

8. The Sticky Science of Malaysian Dodol, by Alias A. Karim and Rajeev Bhat

9. The Perfect Cookie Dough, by Aki Kamozawa and H. Alexander Talbot

10. To Bloom or Not to Bloom, by Amelia Frazier and Richard Hartel

11. Bacon: The Slice of Life, by Timothy Knight

12. Scandinavian “Sushi”: The Raw Story, by Pia Snitkjær and Louise M. Mortensen

13. Maximizing Food Flavor by Speeding Up the Maillard Reaction, by Martin Lersch

14. Lighten Up! The Role of Gases in the Culinary Experience, by Matt Golding

15. The Meringue Concept and Its Variations, by Peter Wierenga, Helen Hofstede, Erik van der Linden, Sidney Schutte, and Jonnie Boer

16. Why Does Cold Milk Foam Better? Into the Nature of Milk Foam, by Julia Maldonado-Valderrama, Peter J. Wilde, and María J. Gálvez-Ruiz

17. Ice Cream Unlimited: The Possibilities of Ingredient Pairing, by Elke Scholten and Miriam Peters

18. Egg Yolk: A Library of Textures, by César Vega

19. Ketchup as Tasty Soft Matter: The Case of Xanthan Gum, by Thomas Vilgis

20. Taste and Mouthfeel of Soups and Sauces, by John R. Mitchell

21. Playing with Sound: Crispy Crusts, by Paula Varela and Susana Fiszman

22. Baked Alaska and Frozen Florida: On the Physics of Heat Transfer, by Adam Burbidge

23. On Superb Crackling Duck Skin: An Homage to Nicholas Kurti, by Christopher Young and Nathan Myhrvold

24. Sweet Physics: Sugar, Sugar Blends, and Sugar Glasses, by Natalie Russ and Thomas Vilgis

25. Coffee, Please, but No Bitters, by Jan Groenewold and Eke Mariën

26. Turning Waste into Wealth: On Bones, Stocks, and Sauce Reductions, by Job Ubbink

27. Restructuring Pig Trotters: Fine Chemistry Supporting the Creative Culinary Process, by Jorge Ruiz and Julia Calvarro

28. Innovate: Old World Pizza Crust with New World Ingredients, by Thomas M. Tongue Jr.

29. Eating Is Believing, by Line Holler Mielby and Michael Bom Frøst

30. Molecular Gastronomy Is a Scientific Activity, by Hervé This

31. The Pleasure of Eating: The Integration of Multiple Senses, by Juan-Carlos Arboleya, Daniel Lasa, Oswaldo Oliva, Javier Vergara, and Andoni Luis-Aduriz

32. On the Fallacy of Cooking from Scratch, by César Vega and David J. McClements

33. Science and Cooking: Looking Beyond the Trends a Personal, Practical Approach, by Michael Laiskonis

Contributors

Index

Related Subjects


Series


About the Author

César Vega holds a Ph.D. in food science and a culinary degree from Le Cordon Bleu and is research manager at Mars Botanical, a division of Mars, Inc. He has consulted with several avant-garde restaurants on aspects relating to science-based cooking, and he regularly teaches seminars on the relation between science and cooking.

Job Ubbink is a senior consultant at Food Concept and Physical Design in Flüh, Switzerland. Trained as a physical chemist and biophysicist, he has more than twelve years of R&D experience in the food industry. Along with his research on food material science and food biophysics, he is a passionate cook devoted to developing sustainable food practices and culture.

Erik van der Linden is professor of physics and physical chemistry of foods at Wageningen University. From 1991 to 1997, he worked at the interface of science and industry at Unilever Research in the Netherlands and in the United States, leading innovation projects on structural and sensory aspects of detergents, cosmetics, and foods. He earned his M.Sc. degree in theoretical physics and his Ph.D. at Leiden University and was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship at Emory University, where he focused on the stability of oil in water emulsions.

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