Molecular Gastronomy: Putting Science on a Plate

Lasers. Liquid nitrogen. Ink-jet printers. These are not items typically associated with haute cuisine. But molecular gastronomy, broadly defined as the application of scientific techniques to cooking, doesn’t produce typical food. The phrase is attributed to physicist Nicholas Kurti and chemist Herve This, who sought to find out such basic questions as why a soufflé rises and the best temperature to cook an egg. The genre has recently expanded to include novel ways of using laboratory techniques in the kitchen.

But with edible menus, spheres that burst in the mouth, potato foams, and words like “benzaldehyde” on the menu, it’s tough to tell whether this diverse style of cooking is an art, a science, a technological showcase, or an interesting trend that will go the way of Jell-O molds.

For the ardent foodie, the immense attention to every flavor, to every sensory experience, to each squirt of foam, is unparalleled. Though I generally like to keep the laboratory as far away from my dinner plate as possible, I would be interested to try some of these concoctions, as pretentious as they might be.

Bacon with Butterscotch Paste and Dehydrated Apple



Photo source: Alinea-restaurant.com

Presentation plays a big part of the dining experience at Alinea in Chicago, where custom made serving ware turns bacon into a piece of modern art.

Huckleberry

Photo source: Alinea-restaurant.com

If you’ve ever poured Petri dishes, you’re familiar with agar agar, the seaweed-derived substance that forms a solid gel at room temperature and is used in this creation at Alinea. Chefs similarly use carrageenan, also made from seaweed, as a gelling additive.

Candy Cap

Photo source: Alinea-restaurant.com

Finding sweet substances that don’t recrystallize at room temperature—but do have flexibility and molding capabilities—means looking past normal sugar (sucrose) to invert sugars, isomalts, and sugar alcohols.

Textured Chocolate

Photo source: elbulli.com

Hot Potato, Cold Potato

Photo source: Alinea.com

Some dishes, like these from Alinea and elBulli in Spain, involve active participation of the eater. After removing the skewer, the hot potato, along with the black truffle shaving, butter cube, parmesan cube, and slice of chive drop into the cold potato puree. The serving dish is made of wax.

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08.06.2008
Mark Roddey
'Tis a sad realization ... 21rst century Cuisine has left this old 20th century Chef far behind. Hell, I don't really give a crap! I'd rather eat a giant Coney Island Dog loaded with lots of chili, onions and cheese, topped with sauerkraut anytime, anywhere, till the day I died.
06.26.2008
Casual Chefs
This is very cool. Even though i doubt I will ever be willing to pay for such fare. If you have done this, post a recipe on www.casualchefs.com - cheers
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