Thursday, October 25, 2012

Toast, honey and... amino acids

Toast, honing en... aminozuren


Intens gelukkig zat ik een geroosterd stukje brood te eten, ook wel bekend als toast in goed Nederlands. Misschien was het omdat ik honger had, maar de verandering van een droge oude boterham in een fantastische ervaring door het te verhitten is eigenlijk ongelooflijk. Het is de warmte, de geuren, de kleur, alles ervan verbaasd me. Alsof het brood gereanimeerd is en het een tweede kans gekregen heeft.

With intense happiness I was eating a roasted piece of bread, also known in the english vernacular as: toast. It might have been because I was hungry, but the transformation of a piece of stale bread into a wonderfully tasting, almost superreal, experience by heating it is simply amazing. It is the warmth, the flavours, the colour, everything about it amazes me. As if the bread had been reanimated and had been given a second chance.

Friday, September 14, 2012

Bread, chaos and Lyapunov exponents

Brood, chaos en Lyapunov exponenten


"Alle zorgen zijn minder met brood", schreef de auteur van Don Quichote, Miguel de Cervantes. Wie kan hem ongelijk geven, het is waar, de toevoeging van brood bij een maaltijd, of op zichzelf, brood is fantastisch eten. Ik laat hier zien wat er in het deeg omgaat waardoor het brood zo 'chaotisch' goed wordt.


"All sorrows are less with bread", wrote the author of Don Quixote, Miguel de Cervantes. Who can argue with him, for it is true, either the addition of bread to a meal or taken as a meal by itself, bread is a wonderful food. The way of preparing, especially the kneading of the dough, is quite important. I will show what happens with the dough that makes bread 'chaotically' good.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Emulsions, aerosols and granular systems

We continue with our exploration of two-phase systems. As you might recall a stable two-phase system consists of a continuous phase and a dispersed phase. In an emulsion we have two fluids as the two phases. The two fluids cannot mix otherwise the two phases would disappear. I already discussed foams and gels as examples. In this episode we will explore more characteristics of these systems. Just like in the case of the foam, when we make an emulsion, there are shear forces at work that break the droplets of the dispersed phase.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Spontaneous symmetry baking

After the discovery of a new boson (most probably the Higgs) at CERN I feel somewhat compelled to explain what the Higgs is and what it does. What better way to do it than with an analogy! We are going to try and recreate the Higgs mechanism with food. This is going to be a rather long post. First I'll explain what the Higgs field is and why it was theorised. After that I will give you a kitchen example of how we can view the Higgs field.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

More than meets the eye


Colour influences our daily lives, whether we are aware of it or not. Sight is our main sense, a large portion of our brain is primed for visual stimuli. Finding and determining potential food is one of the uses for survival. In addition we don't want to eat poisonous plants or animals. Colours help us to find food "at first sight" since red berries between the green branches are easily spotted. It seems we perceive three primary colours, red, green and blue. The theory about the way we perceive colour is not completely elucidated, though. Since the eye and brain are almost inextricably linked it is clear that neurological and even psychological factors are not to be ruled out in the perception of colour.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

It's a matter of taste


"Nothing takes the taste out of peanut butter quite like unrequited love." - Charlie Brown (by Charles Schulz). Actually Charlie Brown is slightly mistaken here, but we can forgive him because we all know what unrequited love can do. I'm sure he can still taste his salty tears as he can the saltiness of his peanut butter. However, the apparent odour might be affected. Taste and smell are distinct senses, but they are easily entangled in common experience. Of course, it is our sense of smell that is impaired by our blocked nose, either from tears or from a cold, which affects the flavour. In this episode some background theory to the sense of taste. 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Five dimensions of perception

It has been a while since the previous edition, however there is a perfectly good reason for that. I have been absorbed by reading parts of the Modernist cuisine. A comprehensive work about almost everything you have ever wanted to know about preparing food, and couldn't even think of asking! It is a five part compendium of techniques and analysis of ingredients and preparation methods in order out find out why the things work the way they do in the kitchen. Former physicist Alan Myhrvold took it upon himself to develop this cookbook and with thousands of pages of stunning pictures and recipes it is absolutely gorgeous. I don't want to discuss the book, but rather take things one step further. The formalisation of the the art of cooking. It seems a rather daunting enterprise to describe the science of cooking in such a way, and it may not even be possible. When Bertrand Russell tried to formalise logic in the beginning of the previous century he encountered severe problems that changed views on logic forever. Nevertheless the journey often enlightens. Myhrvold took a right step, but it's possible to take one step more. Let's make a roadmap and see where we end up.