A kitchen is no different from most science laboratories and
cookery may properly be regarded as an experimental science. Food
preparation and cookery involve many processes which are well
described by the physical sciences. Understanding the chemistry and
physics of cooking should lead to improvements in performance in
the kitchen. For those of us who wish to know why certain recipes
work and perhaps more importantly why others fail, appreciating the
underlying physical processes will inevitably help in unravelling
the mysteries of the "art" of good cooking.
Strong praise from the reviewers -
"Will be stimulating for amateur cooks with an interest in
following recipes and understanding how they work. They will find
anecdotes and, sprinkled throughout the book, scientific points of
information... The book is a pleasant read and is an invitation to
become better acquainted with the science of cooking." - NATURE
"This year, at last, we have a book which shows how a practical
understanding of physics and chemistry can improve culinary
performance Barham] first explains, in a lucid non-textbooky way,
the principles behind taste, flavour and the main methods of food
preparation, and then gives fool-proof basic recipes for dishes
from roast leg of lab to chocolate souffle." - FINANCIAL TIMES
WEEKEND
"This book is full of interesting and relevant facts that
clarify the techniques of cooking that lead to the texture, taste
and aroma of good cuisine. As a physicist the author introduces the
importance of models in preparing food, and their modification as a
result of testing (tasting)."- THE PHYSICIST
"Focuses quite specifically on the physics and food chemistry of
practical domestic cooking in terms of real recipes... Each chapter
starts with an overview of the scientific issues relevant to that
food group, e.g. toughness of meat, thickening of sauces, collapse
of sponge cakes and souffles. This is followed by actual recipes,
with the purpose behind each ingredient and technique explained,
and each recipe followed by a table describing some common
problems, causes and solutions. Each chapter then ends with
suggested experiments to illustrate some of the scientific
principles exploited in the chapter." - FOOD & DRINK
NEWSLETTER
"
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!