Cooking also obeys the laws of physics, in particular chemistry. Yet it is quite possible to cook without understanding it. You can cook better if you do understand what is going on, particularly if you want to deviate from the ways that people have cooked before. If you want to follow a recipe exactly, slavishly, what the hell, you can do it without understanding it. As a rote automaton, you can say, "yes, I mixed this, I cook at this temperature" and so forth. But if you want to do something really different, if you want to go color outside the lines, if you want to go outside of the recipe, it helps if you have some intuition as to how things work.
On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
Tagged with nathan myhrvold science cooking edge
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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On the Science of Cooking - An Edge Conversation with Nathan Myhrvold
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Science Nerds Meet Foodies In ‘Modernist Cuisine’ : NPR
The 40-pound, six-volume, $625 and 2,438-page cookbook celebrates the science of cooking. But at that price â and with such exactingly detailed "recipes" â who’s gonna buy it?
http://www.npr.org/2011/03/12/134456683/science-nerds-meet-foodies-in-modernist-cuisine
Tagged with food npr modernist cousine nathan myhrvold
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Freakonomics Radio: Waiter, There’s a Physicist In My Soup, Part I
“Waiter, There’s a Physicist in My Soup.” It’s the first segment of a two-parter about food and food science; it’s also about why we eat what we eat, and how that may change in the future. The first episode takes a look at the “molecular gastronomy” movement, which gets a big bump in visibility next month with the publication of a mammoth cookbook called Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking. Its principal author is Nathan Myhrvold, the former chief technology officer of Microsoft who now runs an invention company called Intellectual Ventures.
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Cooking for Geeks: Science, Hacks, & Good Food
Cooking for Geeks covers a new way of looking at how to cook for the hacker, maker, and creative person. By bringing science and experimentation into the kitchen, this panel will show how to create better food and new experiences at the dinner table.
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