Food science books are all the rage these days and naturally of particular interest to readers of Cooking For Engineers. The top dog in the library is still Harold McGee's incredible work, On Food and Cooking. Last month another food science book, The Science of Good Food, was published. This new book might be more accessible to the casual curious cook due to its easy language and beautiful layout.
The Science of Good Food comes with the tag line "The ultimate reference on how cooking works" which is a bit of a stretch. It does cover a wide variety of topics in its 604 full color glossy pages, but it isn't fully comprehensive. What it does do well is explaining the science in easy to understand language. The entries have just enough complexity for the curious to satisfy their appetites without diving into so much detail that a pedestrian reader would feel intimidated and stop reading.
Sixteen hundred entries are arranged alphabetically and every entry that I've read has a "What It Is" (covering the basic definition of the entry including some history), "What It Does" (covering how the term relates to cooking), and "How It Works" section (covering the science behind why it does what it does). "Science Wise" and "Fast Facts" boxes littered throughout the entries provides additional scientific info and trivia while "Kitchen Wisdom" boxes provide interesting tips that can be applied to your cooking.
Entries are heavily cross-referenced (through bold faced words and phrases as well as "See Also" sections at the end of each entry) and many additional terms "redirect" you to the entry containing the most relevant information. For example, when I looked up the term "garlic" I found that I should read about "Allium" instead. There I found information covering garlic, leek, shallot, and onions. Since the members of the Allium genera affect food similarly (and for similar reasons), reading about the group in general makes sense. I also found a chart comparing various alliums like chives, cipollini onions, ramps, scallions, and shallots, an easy recipe for caramelized onions (one of over 100 recipes in the book), and a "Kitchen Wisdom" section on some tips to help keep you from tearing up as you chop onions. This last bit was a little disappointing as it promotes some "faulty" tips such as chopping near a lit candle (which if you've ever tried doesn't really do anything - you'll probably need a series of Bunsen burners set up around your cutting board for it to be effective, but then you can't safely cut the onions).
Speaking of faulty science, I was particularly irked by the mention of cholesterol as one of the fats found in egg yolk (cholesterol is not a fat, it's a sterol or alcohol which is fat-soluble). In the cholesterol entry, it starts off with "A soft, waxy lipid (a type of fat)..." which is also kind of wrong. Since cholesterol is fat soluble it is a lipid, but fats are type of lipid, not the other way around. Vitamin A is a lipid, but is not a fat. Similarly, cholesterol is a lipid but not a fat. But, here I'm nitpicking - on the whole the book is quite good and most people won't be focused on exact definitions.
The layout of The Science of Good Food is very pleasing. Printed on 8-in. by 10-in. high contrast white pages in two columns in relatively a large serif font with bold sans serif section headings and subheadings, the text is easy to read and aesthetically pleasing. The photographs chosen were also excellent - mostly they get you thinking about the food topic, technique, or concept instead of actually illustrating anything in particular, but in this book it works well. Although rare, the illustrations (like the anatomy of a knife or beef chart) are extremely well designed and easy to understand and interpret.
One last reason to check out this book is something I discovered when skimming the bibliography. Under "Websites", Cooking For Engineers is listed as a reference!
The Science of Good Food is available in the following formats:
Paperback
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Books
The Science of Good Food
6 comments on The Science of Good Food:(Post a comment)
On November 06, 2008 at 11:57 PM, AussieAltissima (guest) said...
Hey, Congrats on your acknowledgement in the bibliography! "Cooking for Engineers" is one of my favourite food references too.
On November 08, 2008 at 01:43 AM, kayenne (guest) said...
Should I wait for a second or third edition to see if they will correct such errors?
On November 08, 2008 at 06:42 AM, Michael Chu said...
kayenne wrote:
Should I wait for a second or third edition to see if they will correct such errors?
Who knows when future editions (if any) will be published... The "bugs" in the current edition are really mostly nitpicking and me being a definition stickler. The common myths of how to keep onions from making you cry have no excuse however.
On October 27, 2011 at 06:08 PM, ruthie (guest) said...
Subject: not nitpicking
Quote:
Vitamin A is a lipid, but is not a fat. Similarly, cholesterol is a lipid but not a fat. But, here I'm nitpicking
That's not nitpicking, that's a pretty big goof, IMO. I may not be an engineer, but I've got about 40 units of University Biological Science courses behind me, so not an untutored reader. In my book, that's a big goof. I read books like these for the details, and if it's new-to-me information, I naturally want it to be correct. I want to use the info I find in a food science book with confidence.
Yeah, this is cholesterol, not a food, as such, but what makes it significant is that cholesterol is such i big bad in the popular mind. People are freakish enough on the subject as it is, without further confusing them and giving them yet another thing to obsess over.
On October 28, 2011 at 07:55 PM, yocona said...
Subject: Re: not nitpicking
ruthie wrote:
I may not be an engineer, but I've got about 40 units of University Biological Science courses behind me, so not an untutored reader. In my book, that's a big goof. I read books like these for the details, and if it's new-to-me information, I naturally want it to be correct. I want to use the info I find in a food science book with confidence.
Then you should check out CookWise, ruthie. Shirley Corriher is all about the science.
On October 29, 2011 at 02:09 AM, Michael Chu said...
Subject: Re: not nitpicking
yocona wrote:
Then you should check out CookWise, ruthie. Shirley Corriher is all about the science.
ruthie wrote:
I may not be an engineer, but I've got about 40 units of University Biological Science courses behind me, so not an untutored reader. In my book, that's a big goof. I read books like these for the details, and if it's new-to-me information, I naturally want it to be correct. I want to use the info I find in a food science book with confidence.
Then you should check out CookWise, ruthie. Shirley Corriher is all about the science.
I second that recommendation for CookWise. They've finally got a paperback version out and it's available at many Costcos (or was last month). Bakewise is also excellent.
A couple of other books that do a great job on the science of cooking is Harold McGee's On Food and Cooking and Jeff Potter's Cooking for Geeks.
One last recommendation is the seemingly expensive ($450+) Modernist Cuisine which I think is worth every penny. At about $10 a pound, it's cheaper by weight than many other cookbooks and it really is the closest thing we have to the sum total of all current cooking knowledge in the world.