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Arts and Traditions of the Table: Perspectives on Culinary History

Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor

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Hervé This (pronounced "Teess") is an internationally renowned chemist, a popular French television personality, a bestselling cookbook author, a longtime collaborator with the famed French chef Pierre Gagnaire, and the only person to hold a doctorate in molecular gastronomy, a cutting-edge field he pioneered. Bringing the instruments and experimental techniques of the laboratory into the kitchen, This uses recent research in the chemistry, physics, and biology of food to challenge traditional ideas about cooking and eating. What he discovers will entertain, instruct, and intrigue cooks, gourmets, and scientists alike.

Molecular Gastronomy, This's first work to appear in English, is filled with practical tips, provocative suggestions, and penetrating insights. This begins by reexamining and debunking a variety of time-honored rules and dictums about cooking and presents new and improved ways of preparing a variety of dishes from quiches and quenelles to steak and hard-boiled eggs. He goes on to discuss the physiology of flavor and explores how the brain perceives tastes, how chewing affects food, and how the tongue reacts to various stimuli. Examining the molecular properties of bread, ham, foie gras, and champagne, the book analyzes what happens as they are baked, cured, cooked, and chilled.

Looking to the future, Herv' This imagines new cooking methods and proposes novel dishes. A chocolate mousse without eggs? A flourless chocolate cake baked in the microwave? Molecular Gastronomy explains how to make them. This also shows us how to cook perfect French fries, why a souffl' rises and falls, how long to cool champagne, when to season a steak, the right way to cook pasta, how the shape of a wine glass affects the taste of wine, why chocolate turns white, and how salt modifies tastes.

392 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2003

414 people are currently reading
2530 people want to read

About the author

Hervé This

47 books48 followers
Hervé This is is a French physical chemist who works at the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique. His main area of interest is molecular gastronomy, or how our knowledge of chemistry and science in general, can be used as a tool to enhance culinary experiences, rather than the purely empirical knowledge which more often than not dictates the rules in the kitchen. With the late Nicholas Kurti, he coined the scientific term "Molecular and Physical Gastronomy" in 1988, which he shortened to "Molecular Gastronomy" after Kurti's death in 1998[1]. While it is often stated that he has a Ph.D in Molecular Gastronomy, his degree is in "Physico-chimie des matériaux" (Physical Chemistry of Materials), for which he wrote a thesis entitled "La gastronomie moléculaire et physique"[2]. He has written several books on the subject which can be understood even by those who have little or no knowledge of chemistry, but so far only two have been translated into English. He also collaborates with the magazine Pour la Science, the aim of which is to present scientific concepts to the general public. He is also a corresponding member of the Académie d'agriculture de France, and, more recently, the scientific director of the foundation "Food Science & Culture", which he created at the French Academy of Science.

Every month he adds one new "invention" in the Arts and Science section of the website of the three-star chef Pierre Gagnaire.

Although his main focus is on physical chemistry, he also attributes great importance to the emotional aspect of cooking, as the title of one of his books shows: Cooking is love, art, technique.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 78 reviews
Profile Image for Petra X.
2,455 reviews35.7k followers
May 6, 2015
I'm really enjoying this. Some of it is going over my head but I'm starting to get an idea of how it works. It's fascinating, not just the science and the cooking but the experiments. I'm going to try this one.

Put an egg into a tall glass and pour over vinegar. In two days the shell will have dissolved leaving the egg floating. Magic!
Profile Image for Bookworm.
47 reviews3 followers
October 2, 2007
Very cool book. At times a little too much science, but very interesting. I wish it had actually included recipes and not just theory. Though I might try some of the applications anyway. Mayo without oil anyone? Or, how about chocolate mousse made only with water and cocoa?
Profile Image for Darren.
1,193 reviews63 followers
June 25, 2012
Molecular Gastronomy has became a catch-all term for the various activities of cooks to manipulate the flavour, appearance and even form of food and its constituent ingredients through scientific means. Of course, on a very basic level, combining ingredients is a form of science, yet it is fair to describe molecular gastronomy as taking things way beyond a basic level.

In recent years molecular gastronomy has started seeping out of the kitchen laboratory and onto the restaurant plate, thanks to a pioneering group of think-ahead chefs who want to really understand and reinvent everything if they can. There is also an enthusiastic bunch of amateur cooks who are doing their own kitchen experimentation. The exclusive genie is really out of the bottle and books like this help shine light on this form of 'kitchen alchemy'.

This book has been translated into English from an earlier work (Casseroles et éprouvettes) and in essence it contains a good, general overview for the average person to this exciting world. This reviewer notes, with a little disdain, the relatively small physical size of the book and its printing - would it have really cost a lot more for another inch or so of paper?

The book is split into four key sections - Secrets of the Kitchen; The Physiology of Flavor; Investigations and Models and A Cuisine for Tomorrow. Each section is further sub-divided and presented by an excellent, detailed contents page at the front - at the back, after a great glossary and bibliography is a very extensive index too. It might be fairer to say that each mini section is effectively its own chapter, and everything that stands in the way is just a navigation tool. Whether it was luck or editing judgement that the tally of mini sections came to 101 we shall never know.

It is pleasing to note that, despite being an academic book by nature and necessity, the writing style has been tailored to be accessible to the average person who wants to learn more. Clearly where further technical or scientific detail is needed, this book would not solely suffice but there is sufficient pointers to the really-detailed reading that would probably be just boring filling to 95%-plus of this book's target audience. It is a great compromise that does not water the book down or make it out-of-reach. In the years that have passed since this book was released in French, more developments and advances have taken place. Maybe it is time for an update (hint, hint!). That said, this book still remains an excellent introduction to a subject that is by nature prone to being confusing to outsiders. If you are looking for pretty pictures and diagrams of the finished dishes this book is not for you - but the written word can be a very powerful, illuminative force in its own right.

To conclude, this is a great book on so many levels. It acts as an introduction to a nearly endless science, it sits as a memory aid to many key points and techniques and it sets off a taste for even further reading, experimentation and trial. Now, that hoped-for updated version can have more than 101 mini chapters and, oh, a little larger physical presence too.

Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring The Science of Flavor, written by Hervé This and published by Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231133135, 392 pages. Typical price: GBP9. YYYYY.



// This review appeared in YUM.fi and is reproduced here in full with permission of YUM.fi. YUM.fi celebrates the worldwide diversity of food and drink, as presented through the humble book. Whether you call it a cookery book, cook book, recipe book or something else (in the language of your choice) YUM will provide you with news and reviews of the latest books on the marketplace. //
Profile Image for Wendy.
521 reviews16 followers
July 25, 2008
This is a collection of 101 short essays on various topics in the science of food and cooking. It a bit of a mixed bag: you get everything from essays on how food chemists identified the compounds that give particular types of wine or cheese their flavor, to wacky science experiments you can try at home (how much air can you beat into an egg white), to slightly offbeat things that you might actually try in your kitchen at home. (This describes a technique for making a chocolate mousse using pure chocolate and water or a flavorful liquid. He suggests orange juice, but I'm more inclined to raid the liquor cabinet.) The essays can get pretty technical sometimes - I'm really not sure how comprehensible it is to folks without some chemistry and biochemistry background.

This book is best sampled a couple of essays at a time, which is why it's taken me ages to read. It just gets overwhelming if you try to devour it at once.

I think I was hoping for a book with a few more practical recipes and a bit less industrial food science. (There are essays on novel ways of filtering tartrates out of wine and of mass producing smoked salmon by electrical deposition of smoke particles. Interesting, I suppose, but I'm never going to try it at home.)

The book was translated from the French, and the translation is mostly good, although there are some oddball turns of phrase (I've never seen anyone say "dehydrogenase glutamate" before - it's "glutamate dehydrogenase") and a bit of confusion in one or two places (one recipe can't seem to decide whether creme fraiche or regular cream is called for). My copy also has a really odd typesetting/printing error - none of the lower case italicized g's printed. This has led to a few discussions of "astronomie" rather than "gastronomie".
Profile Image for Keith.
76 reviews8 followers
August 28, 2016
This book has a few interesting parts to it, but overall the writing is really disjointed and the chapters are giving you information you can't really use, or bother to remember, because they don't go into enough depth on the subject matter. They will talk about the effects of putting eggs in a vinegar solution and then they'll say something else happens in another case, but they don't tell you what that case is. They spend a lot of time naming different chemicals and numbers in brief, but not in a context that you can make any use of.

The useful information I got from this book was if you're cooking lentils or beans and want to speed up the process or help them fall apart, add baking soda to the water (to make it more alkaline). Also if you're cooking pasta, add a little vinegar or lemon juice to the water to keep the pasta from sticking together. These tips and the explanations behind them were two of the only memorable parts of this book.

I didn't read the chapter on wine so maybe it's better.
Profile Image for Kalle Wescott.
838 reviews16 followers
August 25, 2021
I read /Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor/, by Hervé This:

https://kitchen-theory.com/molecular-...

Fascinating. I don't cook much (yet), so the first part on secrets of the kitchen was less useful for me than others.

The physiology of flavor was fascinating, though, including how the receptors for the 5th taste (umami) work. Did you know there are 5 different types of bitter?

The book also featured food investigations and models, essentially the physics of food, mostly cooked, but also covering emulsions, tenderizing, the terroirs of Alsace, "length" in the mouth of wine, tannins and more.

Finally, the book made suggestions for cooking of the future (where's Nathan Myhrvold when we need him?). Cooking in a vacuum / sous vide, aromas, reactions, mousse, and textures.

Awesome content. A bit stilted in English.

I should have read it in the original French.

After all, Italian is for lovers, but food should be discussed in French.
Profile Image for Pio.
299 reviews62 followers
December 31, 2017
Nếu mở đầu năm nay cực kỳ tệ hại bằng một quyển của Borges thì cuối năm được kết sổ bằng một quyển bí kíp nấu ăn khá hay và hài hước đúng chất Pháp, nhưng chính sự lòng vòng và thái độ không gì chắc chắn của tác giả làm mình bối rối chẳng biết nên làm gì với tất cả các mẹo đầy thể nghiệm như thế (tất nhiên, ẩm thực phân tử là một ngành siêu mới trên thế giới, nên tôi cũng có thể thông cảm được phần nào cho ông).
Profile Image for Thảo.
62 reviews13 followers
May 9, 2017
Quyển sách về ẩm thực phân tử ấn tượng và thú vị nhất trong các sách về cookbook từng đọc.
Trước giờ, về ẩm thực mình chẳng biết gì về ngoài làm một số loại bánh đơn giản mà mình không hiểu được đến tận cùng những điều nho nhỏ trong lúc làm bánh. Chẳng hạn là tại sao phải cho muối vào bánh gato, hay một số loại bánh, đánh lòng trắng trứng phải bông lên, không được dính 1 tí xíu nào của lòng đỏ? Những thứ đó thật sự mình không biết và trong các sách hướng dẫn làm bánh mình có, cũng không giải thích được cặn kẽ cho mình. Nên khi bạn mình giới thiệu quyển này, nói là sẽ giải đáp được một số thắc mắc của mình. Mình không suy nghĩ gì, đặt tiki ngay và luôn. Mặc dù sách mua từ năm ngoái, mà năm nay mới lôi ra đọc kĩ.
Bạn đừng bị đánh lừa bởi cái tên nhé. Sách này không phải nói về truyền thuyết cái chảo hay cái quần gì đâu. Mà đây là một quyển sách dùng kiến thức khoa học của hóa học, vật lý để giải thích những bí kíp nấu ăn đó. Tên tiếng Anh của nó là Molecular gastronomy.
Trong quyển này, giới thiệu và cắt nghĩa,rất nhiều phương pháp nấu ăn, chế biến. Chẳng hạn như:
- Gelification: dùng gelatine, pectin hay rau câu,… tạo kết cấu dạng thạch. Ví dụ như các loại rau câu mình hay ăn hay như món thịt đông.
- Emulsification & infusion: dùng nhũ tương (các dung dịch không tan vào nhau), hoặc chiết xuất từ mùi hương, thảo mộc,… để tạo mùi cho món ăn. Cái này ứng dụng trong trộn salad. Trộn rau cho ngon, rau còn xanh nè
- Smoking: tạo khói cho món ăn. Cái này dùng nhiều cho mấy thủ thuật chụp ảnh đồ ăn nè :v
Không chỉ trong chế biến đồ ăn, mà cả đồ uống cũng được ứng dụng nữa. Đọc quyển này mình phát hiện ra bình rượu nho mình với anh Tư Lê cất công mang từ núi cao về Sài Thành đã thành công cốc. Huhu. Rượu vang là cả một câu chuyện dài từ quá trình lên men, phải có độ pH thích hợp cho đến lúc lấy ra, cho dung dịch một chất nào đó để ngăn cản sự oxi hóa với làm ruoju trong, rồi phải ủ trong thùng gỗ để các hoạt chất phenolic tiết ra, phản ứng với rượu để cho ra được cái mùi vanillin. Dafuggggg. Tôi mà biết cái này sớm, bình rượu nho của tôi đã không đến nỗi nào rồi. Hự. Thật đáng tiếc.
Đọc sách này, ngoài việc biết thông tin ra, còn đặt ra những câu hỏi rất bình thường mà mình không để ý, cũng không tìm hiểu. Ví dụ như là tại sao táo bị thâm sau khi cắt ra, hay bảo quản rau củ quả trong tủ lạnh như thế nào cho tốt? rồi khi pha trà sữa thì cho trà vào sữa hay ngược lại? vân vân và mây mây câu hỏi hay ho liên quan đến đồ ăn thức uống hằng ngày của bản thân mà mình không biết đến.
Ngoài ra, đọc quyển này xong, mình tự hỏi, không biết có phải những người đầu bếp, thợ làm bánh giỏi là những người giỏi hóa, lý không, hay đơn thuần là làm nhiều nên có kinh nghiệm?
Profile Image for زهراء مُحمد.
Author 2 books9 followers
September 10, 2016
Molecular Gastronomy: Exploring the Science of Flavor is food book written by Hervé This. He is a French physical chemist on the staff of the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique in Paris. M. B. DeBevosie translated this book from French to English and published it in 2006. The book has 377 pages, four chapters total. Each chapter consists of several sections. In the beginning of each section the author states the history behind writing the section to provide the readers with generous information about his argument. Then, he states the questions he is trying to answer following it with an experiment that reveals the scientific reasoning of how things are cooked. Each section presents one argument. The sections are 2 - 2 ½ pages long, directly to the point. The author is very confident in his experiments, although, the experiments are basic and simple, but are reasonable in winning the argument. He even asks the readers many times to try it themselves to gain their trust. The book is smooth in reading, in which it is designed into sections each is 2- 2 ½ page long that allows the reader to breath in between the sections. For a physical chemistry book about food I find the sections style a very smart idea not to overload the reader with long research talk, but rather simplify the research to be easier to understand and straight forward.

Overall, Molecular Gastronomy is a good book in “Exploring the Science of Flavor”, unusual to any of the cookbooks I have seen. Its beauty is in combining science with food, it’s a distinctive perspective and a new lens into understanding the art of cooking and flavor.
Profile Image for kirk.
15 reviews10 followers
September 28, 2008
It's easy to see why the world's most forward-thinking chefs have been inspired by this book. Admittedly, I glossed over a lot of chemistry in this book, of which I had little to no understanding. In spite of that, Herve This' book is as fun to read as he is French. (I'm not sure: did that make sense?) Consider the definition of "flavor" found in the glossary to his book:

"A term that describes the synthetic sensation produced by eating and drinking . . . that corresponds to the French gout. It is a pity that the English word has been imported into French (flaveur) and that gout usually is translated in English as "taste"! But let us persevere in our campaign against error: The world of tomorrow will be the one that we create today."

Mr. This' book is full of challenges to the reader. Even as he describes the science behind potential new cooking techniques, he offers no recipe for success, but dares readers to give the new methods a whirl and explore the outcomes.
Profile Image for Michael.
572 reviews20 followers
January 27, 2015
I don't think this book works very well as an audiobook.
I was fine with the rather in-depth science. I guess I know more about the science mentioned in the book than about the food.
This books is essentially an numeration and unfortunately most of it just went in one ear and out the other.
I retained two things:
hot coffee + milk + 5min wait is hotter than hot coffee + 5min wait + milk
All spirits ageing in oak barrels will acquire a vanilla flavour.
Profile Image for Bill.
312 reviews3 followers
November 19, 2013
Sometimes fascinating, always brief (3-page chapters). Perfect for browsing, even by those of us with little talent in the kitchen.
Profile Image for Phạm Thảo.
46 reviews26 followers
March 14, 2019
Bí ẩn của cái chảo” là cuốn sách nấu ăn thú vị bậc nhất mình từng đọc. Tác giả cuốn sách là giáo sư Hóa Lý Herves This làm việc tại Viện nghiên cứu Nông học quốc gia Pháp. Ông sử dụng kiến thức hóa học giải thích tất tần tật các bí quyết nấu ăn. Đọc xong cuốn sách mình lại càng thấy hâm mộ những bạn beautiful minds. Tại sao đến chuyện bếp núc cũng có thể thi vị đến thể?

Mình xin tóm lược những đoạn mình thích nhất trong quyển sách đáng yêu nhất quả đất này:

1. Món vịt kiểu Brillat – Savarin:
Nguyên tắc làm việc của lò vi sóng là chỉ làm nóng phần thực phẩm có chứa nhiều nước. Vì vậy, khi nấu thịt trong lò vi sóng không đúng cách sẽ tạo thành món thịt luộc chứ không phải thịt nướng.
Điều đó khiến các đầu bếp thông thường cho rằng vịt xốt cam không thể thực thiện trong lò vi sóng. Tuy nhiên, khoa học có thể khắc phục nhược điểm của lò như sau: Rán vịt thật nhanh trong bơ trên lửa lớn cho đến khi lớp vỏ trở nên vàng ươm và giòn tan. Dùng giấy thấm để hút mỡ trên bề mắt thịt sau đó dùng xi lanh bơm rượu hương cam vào giữa miếng thịt (muốn thịt thơm ngon hơn thì hãy thêm muối và ngâm hạt tiêu vào rượu trước khi bơm vào thịt). Như vậy, lò vi sóng sẽ vận hành theo đúng nguyên tắc chỉ nấu phần thịt được bơm rượu mà bỏ qua quần vỏ đã bị mất nước khi rán. Ta sẽ có một món vịt sốt cam chín ở trong mà vẫn giữ được phần vỏ giòn ở phía ngoài.

2. Luộc trứng sai cách
Một trong những sai lầm thường gặp nhất là luộc trứng kỹ làm lòng đỏ bị bao phủ bởi lớp màu xanh còn lòng trắng trứng sinh ra mùi khó chịu làm người ăn tưởng như trứng không tươi. Nguyên nhân của sai lầm này là khi nấu trứng quá lâu, các phân tử protein của lòng trắng chứa nguyên tử lưu huỳnh sẽ giải phóng ra khí hydro sunfur gây ra mùi trứng thối và phản ứng với sắt có trong một số protein gây ra màu xanh nhạt.

Để giải quyết vấn đề này, cách lược trứng đúng là cho trứng vào nước đang sôi, đun tiếp 10 phút tính từ lúc nước bắt đầu sôi, sau đó cho vào nước lạnh ngay khi vớt ra. (Questional?)

3. Tác dụng hòa tan kỳ diệu của dứa
Giáo sư vật lý Oxford Nicholas Kurti đã dùng khoa học chứng min các enzyme có trong nước ép dứa có khả năng phân giải protein. Như vậy, thịt sẽ được làm mềm một cách tuyệt đối khi được ướp với nước ép dứa. Ông đã làm thí nghiệm tiêm nước ép dứa vào 1 phần thịt để nướng rô-ti. Sau thời gian, phần thịt không có nước dứa vẫn còn màu hồng đặc trưng của thịt lợn chưa đủ chín, phần có nước dứa thì ngược lại thịt chín hoàn toàn.

Ngoài ra, quyển sách này còn vô vàn bí ẩn khoa học về rượu vang, phương pháp làm bánh và các loại nước sốt. Các bạn beautiful mind thật là biết truyền cảm hứng quá mà :”(
Profile Image for Ekin Aksu.
62 reviews16 followers
January 24, 2021
This book didn't meet my expectations. There are useful bits of information somewhere in there, such as scientifically explained cooking tips or insight into the structure of foods. However, it is a total mess. All chapters are three-page-long disconnected pieces that don't even have a structure within themselves. It's like the author went to the food science building, asked some scientist what they're working on and wrote a chapter for each of them. The prose is bad as well, even a bit cringy at times. Like caramel being CONSIGNED TO PURGATORY for 20 years because it wasn't researched at all between 1845 and 1865 or something. Amazing.


Anyway, here is a list of useful info I remember from the book:

-Adding bicarbonate to the cooking water makes lentils and beans softer
-Pasta sticks because they get coated with water insoluble amylopectin. This coating can be avoided when proteins in the dough form a stable network outside of the pasta. We can achieve this by adding acid, because proteins are stable at pH 6.
-Capsaicin (the spiciness molecule) receptors are also sensitive to heat, which might be why we feel spicy foods as hot.
- The structure of emulsions and foams are similar. Oil droplets or air are spread in water, and some amphiphilic molecules stabilize the walls surrounding oil/air. In mayonnaise, egg yolk provides lecithins for this job, and their amount is enough for liters of mayo. So if it breaks, add water before adding another yolk.
224 reviews
December 25, 2021
Despite using the same food preparation methods for centuries or even millennia there is still much to learn about the chemical and physical changes that take place. A collection of short essays, this book explores many of the processes used to prepare the food and drink we consume. Unfortunately, while the subject is quite interesting, combining molecular chemistry, biology, and physics, the book itself wasn't particularly interesting. The essays were short and skimped on details: many times I was left wondering at the "why" because This glossed over the explanation. This also assumes that the reader has a good background in gastronomy, making references to many foods and preparation techniques that I don't feel the average reader would be familiar with.
338 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2024
Probably closer to a 2.5

It is not technically deficient, but it also amounts to little more than small tidbits of explanation for physical and chemical properties of varying foods and cooking methods. There is no systemic look at how we taste and what contributes to our perception of taste, either through scientific study or through a more historical analysis. It has some very nice mini-essays on very niche topics- I particularly liked anything involving cheese, and the making of cheese (and how regional variations in the diet of dairy cows can influence the color and texture of cheese)- but I would not recommend this for anything but picking out whatever essays the reader would find personally interesting.
808 reviews11 followers
February 3, 2024
I received this book as a gift in 2006, back when I was an undergraduate chemistry student, but I only got around to reading it in 2024. I can see why it seemed like a good gift for a chemistry student, but it rather missed the mark for me, as it seemed mostly targeted toward lovers of and cooks of French haute cuisine, teaching them the chemistry of techniques and foods they were expected to already know about, many of which I had never heard of and had to look up. In addition, a quibble about the edition I read: something was wrong with the typeface that resulted in some letters (including all italic lowercase "g"s) to be replaced with blank spaces. Something I'd think Columbia University Press would be competent enough to avoid.
Profile Image for Max Khrapak.
13 reviews
June 8, 2023
I was always interested in the scientific background of gastronomy and bought this book a couple years ago. The first reading attempt was not quite successful, the another one - yes, indeed! Although, I cannot say that it was easy reading. I’m okay with the nerdy scientific matter, in fact I wish the book had more this stuff. The author’s style or maybe a translation…There is something in the text that makes it really hard to go through.
44 reviews
December 9, 2023
Livre intéressant sur la chimie en cuisine. Il y a une page par sujet.
Hervé This est un chimiste passionné de cuisine et ça se ressent.
Par contre, trop souvent un sujet consiste en l'explication d'une expérience avec des noms de composés chimiques sans avoir à la fin de conseils concrets et applicables dans notre cuisine.
Il y en a quand même, mais moins de 30% du livre peuvent s'appliquer dans mon cas.
Profile Image for Harshal Patil.
183 reviews
February 28, 2025
I really enjoyed learning about cooking at the molecular level. It's fascinating to see the reactions and choices involved in cooking food in new ways. I get what the author is saying about how our cooking methods haven't changed much over hundreds of years. This rate of change is slow compared to changes in other areas. The part about mayonnaise stayed in my memory. The recipe usually asks for a whole egg, but if you think about it on a molecular level, you only need a drop of egg.
Profile Image for Laura.
407 reviews
June 14, 2020
This book is divided into 101 topics which I read over a long period of time. It explores the intersection of food and science. I have to admit that there was a lot in the book that I was not able to fully comprehend, given that I am not a science-y person. However, that did not detract from my enjoyment of the book and its topics. It presents a very unique way of working with food!
Profile Image for Aurore Labenheim.
37 reviews1 follower
November 11, 2021
I love the concept, really, but to be thoroughly enjoyed, one needs to be pretty well-versed in chemistry... which I am not. Hervé This teaches cool facts about food, busts some myths and shares some cooking tips, and even provide a couple of ideas for recipes but all in all, that was not really the book I was expecting to read. Interesting to leaf through though.
Profile Image for Eric Wurm.
151 reviews14 followers
July 14, 2018
Where chemistry and physics meet the culinary arts, this book brings science and food together. Understanding the nature of changes to foodstuffs brought on by cooking and preparation has the potential to improve your ability in the kitchen.
16 reviews1 follower
January 7, 2021
Will this book make you a better cook? Probably not. Is it particularly useful for home cook? Also no. Is it a fun read if you have a decent background in chemistry? Absolutely! Was fun to see just how much overlap there is between my research and the frontiers of food science.
Profile Image for Paul.
36 reviews
June 4, 2020
Interesting in parts with a great (and amusing) glossary. Just not structured very well, reading more like a bunch of paper summaries stapled together than a book.
43 reviews
January 22, 2022
Slightly too technical for it to be interesting or relatable for everyday cooking. Might be good for hardcore chemistry fans or professional cooks.
Profile Image for Brian.
Author 2 books16 followers
July 4, 2023
What a cool book. 100 or so short chapters, most just a page or two long, and each about a different aspect of food chemistry. This falls somewhere between a cookbook and an organic chem text, but is actually pretty easy reading (if you don't mind long chemical names). Herve This is not only a fine writer, he is obviously a wiz in both the kitchen and at the lab bench. While there are no recipes, per se, there are a ton of creative ideas that can be applied to home cooking. Highly recommended for the science and food curious!
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