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¿Por qué comemos un 35% más cuando comemos con otra persona, y un 75% más cuando somos tres? ¿Por qué el 27% de bebidas a base de zumo de tomate se consumen en los aviones? ¿Qué planes tienen los grandes chefs y las empresas alimenticias para transformar nuestras experiencias gastronómicas? Y lo más importante, ¿qué podemos aprender de estas revoluciones para preparar platos memorables en casa?
Estos son sólo algunos de los ingredientes de Gastrofísica, un libro en el que el brillante profesor de Oxford, Charles Spence, nos muestra cómo nuestros sentidos se relacionan de formas extraordinarias, y la importancia de todos los elementos «más allá del plato» en la comida: el peso de los cubiertos, el color del plato, la música de ambiente, y mucho más. Bien sea comiendo solo o en una fiesta, en un avión o delante del televisor, el autor nos ayuda a entender qué estamos saboreando y a influenciar en la experiencia de los demás.
1154 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 22, 2017
This book is sold on a lie. There is no new information in here, and this is not a new area of science. Everything in here is known by dietitians, people who study food and all that relates to it. As you might imagine, that encompasses quite a wide range of information. It certainly encompasses all that was included in this book. Furthermore, for something that the author attempts to claim is more or less a new focus, he sure does reference a books worth of old information. He is obsessed with Italian futurists from the 1930s, and near the beginning of the book references as far back as the late 1800s. That doesn't sound new at all to me. Sounds like something that has been going on quite a long time, as it should. Food and how we approach and experience it has long been a crucial focal point of the human experience. This fact has not gone on unnoticed, despite the author's attempts to convince us he has stumbled on to something new.
My second point of derision with this false promotion is the b.s. name he has made up for himself. He deigns to call himself a gastro-physicist. Insert hard eye-roll here. This self-applied label seems to infer the physics of the gut. Nope. Readers, just as this is not a new science, there are also no physics herein. Strike that wholly from any ideas you might gain from reading the cover title. The author attempts to explain why he chose this ridiculously inappropriate title for himself by describing what he is actually trained in, being the psychological elements of people and their physical spaces, surroundings, and general interactions with the physical world. I accept that as being a real thing. However, in conjuring a new title to impose on himself, he has decided he will not use the "psych" part of his applicable title, but will instead keep the "physics" part. Herein lies the rub. I suspect the author passed over "psych" for "physics" not because he deemed it less appropriate, but b/c of the differing public perception each of those words holds. In what seems to me a transparent move he has not even included the use of his professional abbreviations following his name on the book. So, instead of being more forthright with his subject being about the psychological dimensions of food consumption, he completely dropped that pre-fix, but kept the wholly inappropriately utilization of "physics." It's b.s. There is no way an Oxford professor did not know that this was misleading and sketchy as all hell.
Those are personally my biggest problems with this book. It's presentation is just shady as all get-out, and I can't help but wonder if this is what the "publish or die" mentality of the academic world has led us into. As far as the information presented, it is nothing new. This is more or less a collection of already available information put into a volume and sold. This is the literary equivalent of a type of meta-analytical overview of a segment of the world of human food (that dietitian's already study, complete with professional journals and organizations and the like), minus the final sifting through of the data and statistical overview. As such, there is nothing wrong with pulling this information into a singular volume and presenting it to the lay public, with a hard lean toward restaurateurs and those who sell pre-packaged foods. That could have been done in an honest and interesting way w/o toying with the readers trust and mislabeling what already exists. It could have been done without claiming newness of a field that has exited as long as the science of food and human consumption has existed, and already has an entire field of educated professionals dedicated to its study.
I feel like it should be made clear that what this book does not deal with, despite the author's psychological background, are eating disorders and unhealthy personal relationships with food. The only exception to that would be a few references toward how some of these larger ideas impact toward the many factors involved in 1st-world lifestyle-influenced obesity. They are almost off-hand remarks, and obesity itself is not a topic discussed per se, but the statements do exist in the text.
As for how the book reads, it's pretty dull. The writing is not bad, but it's not good. The author comes off as arrogant, and if one has any previous knowledge of food matters, his level of expertise in this arena is sadly just crap. I can not understand what in the world possessed him to put his name to this. As I stated previously, this is primarily a gathering almost entirely of other people's work, presented as if he himself had something new here. That said, a reader will repeatedly be told about the author's lab, the parties he has in it for "research," and the big name, multi-national junk food corporations his work benefits. I was left with the impression that book was intended to boost the image of the author in this moneyed arena, and increase his leverage, name recognition, and b.s. status. It's a big sell for his image, and my final conclusion, in so many words, is that I declare shenanigans.I came away with from this book having learned nothing new. I do, however, question what has happened to Oxford to have allowed such an obvious intellectual-poser to be the public product of their formerly reputable university. It kind of makes me sad. Despite appearances, money isn't everything, guys. Once you lose your good standing you're done.