ABSTRACT

Handbook of Molecular Gastronomy: Scientific Foundations and Culinary Applications presents a unique overview of molecular gastronomy, the scientific discipline dedicated to the study of phenomena that occur during the preparation and consumption of dishes. It deals with the chemistry, biology and physics of food preparation, along with the physiology of food consumption. As such, it represents the first attempt at a comprehensive reference in molecular gastronomy, along with a practical guide, through selected examples, to molecular cuisine and the more recent applications named note by note cuisine. While several books already exist for a general audience, either addressing food science in general in a "light" way and/or dealing with modern cooking techniques and recipes, no book exists so far that encompasses the whole molecular gastronomy field, providing a strong interdisciplinary background in the physics, biology and chemistry of food and food preparation, along with good discussions on creativity and the art of cooking.

Features:

  • Gives A–Z coverage to the underlying science (physics, chemistry and biology) and technology, as well as all the key cooking issues (ingredients, tools and methods).

  • Encompasses the science and practice of molecular gastronomy in the most accessible and up-to-date reference available.

  • Contains a final section with unique recipes by famous chefs.

The book is organized in three parts. The first and main part is about the scientific discipline of molecular and physical gastronomy; it is organized as an encyclopedia, with entries in alphabetical order, gathering the contributions of more than 100 authors, all leading scientists in food sciences, providing a broad overview of the most recent research in molecular gastronomy. The second part addresses educational applications of molecular gastronomy, from primary schools to universities. The third part provides some innovative recipes by chefs from various parts of the world.

The authors have made a particular pedagogical effort in proposing several educational levels, from elementary introduction to deep scientific formalism, in order to satisfy the broadest possible audience (scientists and non-scientists). This new resource should be very useful to food scientists and chefs, as well as food and culinary science students and all lay people interested in gastronomy.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction to Molecular Gastronomy and Its Applications

ByHervé This vo Kientza, Christophe Lavelle, Róisín Burke, Alan Kelly

part I|619 pages

Scientific Foundations

chapter |6 pages

Acids in Foods and Perception of Sourness

ByChristian Salles

chapter |5 pages

Anthocyanins in Food

ByVéronique Cheynier

chapter |6 pages

Alcoholic Beverages: Production, Trends, Innovations

ByKonstantin Bellut, Kieran M. Lynch, Elke K. Arendt

chapter |10 pages

Ash in the Kitchen

ByMarta Ghebremedhin, Christine Schreiber, Bhagyashri L. Joshi, Andreas Rieger, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |5 pages

Baking: Laminated Bakery Products

ByRoxane Detry, Christophe Blecker, Sabine Danthine

chapter |2 pages

Baking: Chemical Leaveners

ByLinda A. Luck

chapter |4 pages

Baking: Injera – the Multi-Eyed Flat Bread

ByMahelet Girma, Sumaya M. Abdullahi, Benjamin L. Stottrup

chapter |5 pages

Baking: Viennoiserie – Laminated Pastry Production

ByJames A. Griffin

chapter |4 pages

Baking: How Does Starch Gelatinization Influence Texture?

ByAnaïs Lavoisier

chapter |5 pages

Baking: Sourdough Bread

ByMark Traynor, Imran Ahmad

chapter |8 pages

Barbecue: The Chemistry behind Cooking on a Barbecue

ByFlorent Allais

chapter |10 pages

Bioactivity and Its Measurement

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |3 pages

Canning: Appert and Food Canning

ByJean-Christophe Augustin

chapter |5 pages

Capillarity in Action

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |7 pages

Champagne Tasting from a Scientific Perspective

ByGérard Liger-Belair, Clara Cilindre, Daniel Cordier, Guillaume Polidori, Fabien Beaumont, Thomas Séon

chapter |2 pages

Chantillys: The Cousins of Whipped Cream

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |14 pages

Cheese: Hot Culinary Uses of Cheese

BySébastien Roustel, John A. Hannon

chapter |9 pages

Chocolate: Chocolates from around the World, Simple Physics, Complex Flavour

ByBhagyashri L. Joshi, Sarah Gindra, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |12 pages

Coffee Preparation – from Roasted Beans to Beverage

ByLaura Febvay, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |6 pages

Colour: Natural Pigments in Foods and Their Technical Uses

ByJuan Valverde

chapter |5 pages

Cooking

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |7 pages

Cooking: Culinary Precisions and Robustness of Recipes

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |10 pages

Cryogenics in the Kitchen

ByPeter Barham

chapter |10 pages

Dairy: Milk Gels – a Gastrophysics View

ByJudith Hege, Marta Ghebremedhin, Bhagyashri L. Joshi, Christine Schreiber, H.-C. Gill, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |7 pages

Dairy: Culinary Uses of Milk, Butter and Ice Cream

ByAlan L. Kelly, David S. Waldron

chapter |4 pages

Dairy: Ginger Milk Curd

ByMartin Lersch

chapter |3 pages

Dehydration

ByJosé M. Aguilera

chapter |6 pages

Dispersed System Formalism

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |5 pages

Eggs: Let Us Have an Egg

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |13 pages

Emulsions: Emulsified Systems in Food

ByMarkus Ketomäki, Trivikram Nallamilli, Christine Schreiber, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |8 pages

Emulsions and Foams: Ostwald Ripening and Disproportionation in Practice

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |8 pages

Emulsions: Lecithin

ByElzbieta Kozakiewicz, Daniel Cossuta

chapter |8 pages

Emulsions: Emulsions and Surfactants in the Kitchen

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |10 pages

Essential Oils

ByEric Angelini, Laure Dziuba

chapter |5 pages

Essential Oils: How to Safely Use Essential Oils

ByEric Angelini, Laure Dziuba

chapter |9 pages

Evaporation

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |4 pages

Expansion

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |3 pages

Fats and Oils: Physicochemical Properties of Edible Oils and Fats

BySabine Danthine

chapter |6 pages

Fats and Oils: From Fat Droplets in Plant Seeds to Novel Foods

ByJuan C. Zambrano, Behic Mert, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |5 pages

Fats and Oils: Oxidation of Dietary Lipids

ByLuc Eveleigh

chapter |5 pages

Fermentation: Kimchi

ByWeon-Sun Shin

chapter |5 pages

Fermentation: Fermenting Flavours with Yeast

ByAngela M. Coral Medina, John P. Morrissey

chapter |2 pages

Fermentation: A Short Scientific and Culinary Overview of Kefir

ByChristophe Lavelle, Jean-Baptiste Boulé

chapter |7 pages

Filtration Membranes for Food Processing and Fractionation

ByMarie-Laure Lameloise

chapter |4 pages

Food Matrices and the Matrix Effect in the Kitchen

ByJosé M. Aguilera, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |2 pages

Food Pairing: Is It Really about Science?

ByHervé This vo Kientza, Christophe Lavelle

chapter |8 pages

Freeze-Drying

ByYrjö H. Roos

chapter |8 pages

Foams: Pickering Edible Oil Foam – Toward New Food Products

ByAnne-Laure Fameau

chapter |5 pages

Frying

ByFranco Pedreschi

chapter |3 pages

Gastrophysics: A New Scientific Approach to Eating

ByCharles Spence

chapter |6 pages

Gels

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |4 pages

Heat Transfer in Culinary Sciences

ByDenis Flick

chapter |24 pages

Hydrocolloid Usages as Gelling and Emulsifying Agents for Culinary and Industrial Applications

ByRachel Edwards-Stuart, Reine Barbar

chapter |5 pages

Imaging Foodstuffs and Products of Culinary Transformations

ByMathias Porsmose Clausen, Morten Christensen, Ole G. Mouritsen

chapter |4 pages

Meat: Meat Tenderness and the Impact of Cooking

ByJean-François Hocquette, Alain Kondjoyan

chapter |4 pages

Meat: Heat Transfer in Meat

ByDouglas Baldwin

chapter |4 pages

Microwave Heating and Modern Cuisine

ByAlan L. Kelly, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |8 pages

Mineral Ions and Cooking

ByChristian Salles

chapter |5 pages

Osmosis in the Kitchen

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |4 pages

Pasta: Durum Wheat Proteins – a Key Macronutrient for Pasta Qualities

ByColine Martin, Marie-Hélène Morel, Bernard Cuq

chapter |8 pages

Pasteurization in the Kitchen

ByGabriela Precup, Dan-Cristian Vodnar

chapter |3 pages

Plating: The Science of Plating

ByCharles Spence

chapter |8 pages

Proteins and Proteases

ByLinda A. Luck, Alan L. Kelly

chapter |2 pages

Puddings: The Secret of the Rice Pudding

ByMartin Lersch

chapter |17 pages

Roasting

ByLaura Febvay, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |4 pages

Salt: When Should Salt Be Added to Meat Being Grilled?

ByHervé This vo Kientza, Marie-Paule Pardo, Rolande Ollitrault

chapter |3 pages

Sauces

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |6 pages

Sauces: Hollandaise Sauce

ByGuro Helgesdotter Rognså

chapter |11 pages

Sauces and Purées: The Underside of Applesauce

ByCassandre Leverrier

chapter |6 pages

Seaweeds: Phycogastronomy – the Culinary Science of Seaweeds

ByOle G. Mouritsen

chapter |3 pages

Size Reduction

ByJosé M. Aguilera

chapter |4 pages

Smoked Foods

ByJane K. Parker, Alice Pontin

chapter |5 pages

Sous Vide Cooking

ByDouglas Baldwin

chapter |4 pages

Spherification

ByLinda A. Luck

chapter |4 pages

Squid: Gastrophysics of Squid – from Gastronomy to Science and Back Again

ByOle G. Mouritsen, Charlotte Vinther Schmidt, Peter Lionet Faxholm, Mathias Porsmose Clausen

chapter |3 pages

Sugars: Soft Caramel and Sucre à la Crème – an Undergraduate Experiment about Sugar Crystallization

ByIrem Altan, Patrick Charbonneau, Justine de Valicourt

chapter |7 pages

Sugars: Sugar (and Its Substitutes) in Pastries

ByAnne Cazor, Ramon Morató

chapter |6 pages

Sugars: Erythritol–Sucrose Mixtures out of Equilibrium – Exciting Thermodynamics in the Mouth

ByHannah M. Hartge, Birgitta I. Zielbauer, Thomas A. Vilgis

chapter |6 pages

Sugars: Intramolecular Dehydration of Hexoses

ByMarie-Charlotte Belhomme, Stéphanie Castex, Arnaud Haudrechy

chapter |6 pages

Taste and Sound

ByBruno A. Mesz

chapter |7 pages

Texture: How Texture Makes Flavour

ByOle G. Mouritsen

chapter |6 pages

Thickeners: Cellulose and Its Derivatives

ByRachel Edwards-Stuart

chapter |14 pages

3D Printing of Food

ByMegan M. Ross, Róisín M. Burke, Alan L. Kelly

chapter |5 pages

Umami: The Molecular Science of Umami Synergy

ByOle G. Mouritsen

part II|99 pages

Educational Practices

chapter |8 pages

Experimental Flavour Workshops

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |8 pages

Teaching Argumentation and Inquiry through Culinary Claims

ByErik Fooladi

chapter |3 pages

“Science and Cooking Activities” for Secondary School Students

ByMarie-Claude Feore, Laure Fort, Marie-Blanche Mauhourat, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |2 pages

How to Reduce Oil in French Fries: A Student Experiment

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |8 pages

An Educational Satellite Project around the Scientific Elucidation of Culinary Precisions in Lebanon and in the Middle East

ByReine Barbar, Jean-Marie Malbec, Christophe Lavelle, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |6 pages

Bon Appétit, Marie Curie! A Stanford University Introductory Science of Cooking Course

ByMarkus W. Covert, Imanol Arrieta-Ibarra

chapter |4 pages

Molecular Gastronomy: A Universal Portal to the Molecular Sciences

ByPatricia B. O’Hara

chapter |2 pages

Heat Transfer in the Kitchen – Exercises

ByManuel Combes

chapter |13 pages

Ionic Diffusion in Spherified Calcium Alginate Gels: A Laboratory Experiment

ByLorenzo Soprani, Lara Querciagrossa, Silvia Cristofaro, Luca Muccioli, Silvia Orlandi, Elena Strocchi, Alberto Arcioni, Roberto Berardi

chapter |14 pages

Simple Calculations Based on Cooking

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |3 pages

Teaching and Cooking with Culinary Teachers

ByChristophe Lavelle

chapter |3 pages

The Monthly INRAE-AgroParisTech Seminars on Molecular Gastronomy

ByHervé This vo Kientza

part III|126 pages

Culinary Applications

chapter |7 pages

New Greek Cuisine

ByGeorgianna Hiliadaki, Nikos Roussos

chapter |2 pages

3D Printed Note by Note Recipe: Soya Lobster Prototype

ByRóisín M. Burke

chapter |3 pages

Cooking (with) Olive Oil

ByChristophe Lavelle

chapter |2 pages

Cooking for the Elderly

ByChristophe Lavelle

chapter |8 pages

Culinary Constructivism and Note by Note Cooking

ByPierre Gagnaire

chapter |3 pages

Decantation

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |4 pages

Note by Note Recipes for a Press Conference and Tasting Organized at ITHQ, 2012

ByErik Ayala-Bribiesca, Ismael Osorio

chapter |3 pages

Using Liquid Nitrogen to Prepare Ice Creams in the Restaurant

ByChristophe Lavelle, Hervé This vo Kientza

chapter |8 pages

A Note by Note Traditional Chinese Dinner Created and Served in Singapore

ByKelly Lee, Aaron Goh, Tony Choo, Nicolas Vergnole, Gn Ying Wei, Tais Berenstein

chapter |4 pages

Greek Diracs

ByMakis Kalossakas, Nicolas Nikolakopoulos

chapter |1 pages

An Eclipse Dish

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |2 pages

Modern Swiss Cooking

ByDenis Martin

chapter |5 pages

How Do Eggs Coagulate?

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |3 pages

Vegetable Salad

ByJean Chauvel

chapter |3 pages

Filtration

ByHervé This vo Kientza

chapter |3 pages

Waiter! There Is Garlic in My Meringue!

ByCésar Vega

chapter |4 pages

Lobster and Juniper

ByDavid Toutain

chapter |7 pages

Molecular Cooking

ByRóisín M. Burke, Pauline Danaher

chapter |9 pages

Note by Note Cooking and Note by Note Cuisine

ByHervé This vo Kientza, Róisín M. Burke

chapter |6 pages

Spherification

BySasa Hasic

chapter |2 pages

The Raspberry Pear Viennoiserie

ByJames A. Griffin

chapter |2 pages

Molecular Mixology: Welcome Coffee, a Cocktail with Ten Layers

ByHervé This vo Kientza, Pierre Gagnaire

chapter |2 pages

Cube of “Chicken-Carrot” with Chips of “Basil-Lemon”

ByPasquale Altomonte, Dao Nguyen

chapter |4 pages

The Forest Floor

BySophie Dalton

chapter |2 pages

A Note by Note Macaron

ByJulien Binz

chapter |3 pages

Note by Note Cooking

ByMichael Pontif

chapter |2 pages

Note by Note Sushis

ByGuillaume Siegler