The Flemish Primitives
'The Science of Cooking' Prof. Peter Barham
cooking as a src of inspiration fr the physical sciences
importance of 'questions of why?'
cooking pots → ceramics → materials science
boiling pot → steam engine
split between science and cookery ~1900
rewoven with n.kurit ~1960
vegetables & salt
heat & meat
gels
what can be used beyond pectin & 'jelly'?
currently 15-30 known gelling agents that are edible, with various characteristics
glass
ice cream
what makes it taste creamy or smooth?
extremely small particles (less than 0.1mm)
can be made by very rapid (eg. liquid nitrogen icecream, or very even cooling (traditional)
what is flavour?
flavour is a mental construct, composed of sensory input from ALL senses as well as memory
sight, esp. colour affects flavour →
sound →
affects the 'mechanical' actions and perceived texture of what we are eating
'crunchy' sounds will cause slower, more careful mastication, louder noises will increase 'crunchiness'
people tend to chew in time with music
experiments with playback (& amplification,damping and delay) of eating noises while eating. (x.ref)
touch →
what we are touching while we eat, as well as the textures of the food affects what we taste.
eg. feeling sand paper while eating crème brûlée
Andrew Dornenburg & Karen Page
'food pairing and olive oil' Prof. Lorenzo Cerretani
'The 4 tastes model' Bart de Pooter - De Pastorale
chefs
'The Chicago Style Hotdog' Ben Roche - Moto