MolecularGastronomy

The Father of Molecular Gastronomy Whips Up a New Formula]

Trechos de The Father of Molecular Gastronomy Whips Up a New Formula

  [...] In 2001, This came up with a formal system of classification for what happens
  when foods are mixed, baked, whipped, fried, sautéed in lime juice, and so forth.
  It shows, for example, how the 451 classical French sauces break down into 23 distinct
  types. More important, the system allows the creation and pairing of billions of novel,
  potentially tasty dishes. To demonstrate how, This randomly generated a formula
  describing the physical microstructure of a previously nonexistent dish, then asked
  chef Pierre Gagnaire to plug real ingredients into it. The result — a bitter orange,
  scallop, and smoked-tea concoction — delighted Gagnaire's customers.

  As This guides me through the comfortably cluttered halls around his AgroParis Tech
  lab, he reviews his to-do list. His team is using nuclear magnetic resonance to analyze
  carrot-based soup stocks and studying why green beans change color when cooked. But he
  says that the next big idea he wants to tackle is the role that love — of the cook for
  the diners, the diners for the cook, and of everyone for each other — plays in determining
  tastes. "Cooking for someone is a way of telling them, 'I love you.' This has to be
  understood, of course," This says before pausing for a second. "But first, I do my job
  with the carrots."

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