Related Subjects
Cooking Cooking Education & Reference Essays Holiday Cooking Reference Science & MathThis red `On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen' by Harold McGee is a new edition of what is the most widely quoted culinary work in English. It may be almost as influential on the thinking of culinary professionals as Julia Child's `Mastering the Art of French Cooking' was on attitudes of American home cooking. The testimonials from the likes of Thomas Keller, Paula Wolfert, Jacques Pepin, and Rose Levy...
4Report
This is a truly unique and wonderful book. It contains a tremendous amount of information about the food we eat. It shows the structure and composition of animals, plants, eggs, liquids, and seeds, explaining why each one has certain characteristics (for example, it turns out that the smell of fish comes from the decomponsition of a chemical in ocean fish cells that maintains the proper pressure balance with salt water). It...
3Report
In 1984, when the first edition of ON FOOD AND COOKING was published, it sent off a shockwave through the entire culinary industry. Never before had someone published such a massive study on how science affects cooking in all aspects. It quickly became a bible for professional chefs around the world, often simply referred to in conversation as simply "McGee". For the 20th anniversary of the original publication, author McGee...
4Report
This book is NOT a cookbook, but it's a damned good reference for figuring out why your sauce was flat. I first received this book from a friend, about 3 years ago. I read it, then re-read it, and was amazed that the technical references and jargon were so easily described. As a chemical engineer by trade and a cook by avocation, I loved this book, both for the technical details and the writing, as well as the...
7Report
We chose "Blood and Muffins" as October's theme on account of #Halloween (and because it's #fun), but we had no idea you can use blood IN muffins. As an egg swap. (Gross, we know, but stay with us.) The joke is on us, because it turns out that their protein compositions are so similar they behave almost identically. We're not advocating a return to the old ways when it comes to cooking with blood, but the science nerds in us were curious about this new development, so if yours is too, read on to learn what we discovered about blood (and other strange substitutes).