Jul 092012
 

Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking

Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking

A revolution is underway in the art of cooking. Just as French Impressionists upended centuries of tradition, Modernist cuisine has in recent years blown through the boundaries of the culinary arts. Borrowing techniques from the laboratory, pioneering chefs at world-renowned restaurants such as elBulli, The Fat Duck, Alinea, and wd~50 have incorporated a deeper understanding of science and advances in cooking technology into their culinary art. In Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cookin

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  1. 388 of 394 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Staggering Achievement, March 8, 2011
    By 
    Chris Hennes (Norman, OK) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking (Hardcover)

    In the interest of full disclosure, I had access to a free electronic review copy from the publisher prior to receiving my (unfortunately NOT free) copy from Amazon.com, and I work for an organization mentioned a few times in the book (eGullet).

    It’s hard to review this book without it coming across as hyperbolic: after all, it’s a 50-pound, 2400-page beast that will cost you an entire year’s cookbook budget and must have cost unfathomable sums to produce; you’re either going to love it or hate it. However, I can say with confidence that if you liked McGee’s On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, you are going to love Modernist Cuisine.

    While the press coverage of the book so far has focused on the more esoteric aspects of the book–centrifuges, rotovaps and chemicals, oh my!–the book actually simply treats those items on equal footing with woks, sauté pans, and water. It covers them because you can cook interesting, tasty food with them. Of course, the weird stuff gets all the attention, because, well… it’s weird. But this is a book that devotes an entire chapter to *water*. And the things it teaches you *will* make you a better cook. The authors are never satisfied with “it just works, don’t ask why.” It seems like every paragraph, on every detail, is tightly focused on the question of not just “what happens?” or “how do you do it?” but also “WHY does it work?” and “HOW does it work?” This book is particularly excellent if you are science-minded, but it is written with such clarity that I believe anyone can learn these things from it. Who knew that blowing on a spoonful of soup to cool it was so complicated, and so interesting?

    Probably the most relevant criticism I have encountered is the notion that the recipes it presents are unapproachable. And a few things do, in fact, require a centrifuge (though the majority of the time it is an optional step). There is no doubt that many if not most of the recipes require ingredients that standard American kitchens don’t stock. Most of us don’t have Agar and Xantham Gum in our cupboards, and some find the very idea of cooking with “chemicals” a frightening, foreign, or downright objectionable practice. Truth be told these “chemicals” are no more (or less) unnatural than baking soda or refined sugar (the book spends a great deal of time discussing food safety and nutrition before diving into the “crazy chemicals”). Amazon even sells a starter kit that I’ve found quite useful: Experimental Kit Artistre – 600 grams. And for the most part these ingredients are not used “just for fun”: the goal of the Modernist Cuisine movement is to examine the foods we eat, and our perceptions of that food, and try to make things that taste great, and perhaps even engage us on an intellectual and emotional level. I’ve made a few recipes from the book so far, and in particular the Mac & Cheese was astonishing: it is far and away the best M&C I’ve ever had or made, without question. It actually tastes like cheese! (What a concept, I know). And it’s easier to make and more forgiving than the traditional béchamel-based method. So some of the recipes are simple, and some are complicated. If you have Alinea you probably have a pretty good idea of what the complicated ones look like: daunting, yes, but *not* unachievable if you are willing to put the time in.

    Obviously a review of a 2400-page book could go on more or less forever, but I think the upshot is this: if you are interested in learning the “how” and “why” of cooking, of even the most mundane processes (they cover boiling water in great detail), this book is probably deserving of six stars; it is simply monumental. Save your pennies, this is a worthwhile purchase. If, on the other hand, that is *not* interesting to you, it’s probably two stars: get the first and second volumes from a local university library, and don’t worry about the rest (if you are only going to read the first two volumes I’d say it’s tough to justify the price tag).

    Pros:
    —-
    * Level of detail is incredible
    * Covers the “how” and the “why” of every detail of the cooking process
    * Depth and breadth of coverage is… well, worthy of 2400 pages
    * Stunning photography, graphic design, and even printing

    Cons:
    —-
    * Many of the recipes are very challenging
    * Coverage of hyper-expensive equipment can be off-putting
    * Too tall to fit on any normal bookcase

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  2. 117 of 120 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    This is the cookbook of the year if there is a scientist (big or small) inside you. Highly recommended!, March 10, 2011
    By 
    Jackal (New Hampshire) –

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking (Hardcover)

    Books like Noma: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine, Alinea, and El Bulli 2003-2004 showcase modernist cuisine (or the by many hated label ‘molecular gastronomy’) from the perspective of a creative chef. If you bought some of these books and found the recipes fascinating but the rest of the books a bit too much written by a PR agency, you might like the current book. Much more emphasis has been put on making the text informative. Whereas chefs tend to go for very emotional language, these authors go for a scientific language. However, you don’t need to be a scientist to understand the content, but that is the heart of the book. (If you hated chemistry/physics in school, this book is not for you). So in my view, the objective is to understand cooking innovation from a traditional scientific (some would say geeky) perspective, rather than from the perspective of a creative chef. So don’t expect to hear anything of how to merge locally foraged ingredients (a la Noma) or combine senses like hay smell with autumn vegetables (a la Alinea) or sheer creative genius (a la ElBulli). The focus is cooking innovation, but there is also a lot of material that is interesting even without using any new machinery in the kitchen. Whenever they talk about traditional cooking the focus is on saying something novel and useful. The authors are not just interested in repeating old knowledge.

    If you liked McGee’s On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, but found it too focused on ingredients as opposed to cooking, you will like the current book. If you are worried about the price of the book I have two suggestions. Buy the McGee’s book and then only if you like it actually buy the current book. Buy Beginning Sous Vide: Low Temperature Recipes and Techniques for Getting Started at Home and start experimenting with a low-cost set-up for sous-vide cooking, described in that book. (There is also Under Pressure: Cooking Sous Vide, but I would not recommend that book unless you are willing to splash on a vacuum sealer that can also seal liquids.) If you’re like most people you might stop here, because most would argue that sous-vide is the modernist technique that is closest to mainstream use. You will have enough new knowledge to make great food.

    UPDATE: The best intro book is Modernist Cuisine at Home. Buy that book and only if you like it you should buy the five volumes. Note that the one volume book is a new book so it contains a lot of new recipes. END UPDATE

    The set contains some 25 chapters. Here are just a few highlights to give you a better feel for the book:
    Chapter 3. Food safety. They discuss the almost complete absence of tricinella in US pork, but they don’t go as far as to suggest eating raw pork (which is just as nice as raw beef). At least you will stop overcooking pork. Also useful section on how to remove germs from your kitchen. Very practical and science based.
    Chapter 7. 150 pages of traditional cooking techniques. This is very much similar to McGee’s book, except more practical. Very useful and practical without the use of (much) modernist equipment
    Chapter 9. 90 pages of sous-vide cooking. I’d say that this is all you need to start experimenting. A lot of tables to understand temperature and cooking time combinations.
    Chapter 11. Very interesting chapter on ingredients from the animal kingdom. Just a few things: aging of beef, how to cut a tuna, how to make crispy skin. I wish this chapter was much longer, because it is very interesting and covers new areas.
    Chapter 13. This chapter is all about thickening of liquids (later chapters ditto on gels and foams). Starts by discussing traditional ingredients and then “new” chemicals. You also learn how to make the edible soil that I’ve seen in quite a few restaurants.
    Chapter 18. 60 pages of how to make the perfect cup of coffee. Very…

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  3. 109 of 113 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Ok! Here we go, my review after a couple weeks with the book., April 18, 2011
    By 
    Gavin Scott (Sunnyvale, CA United States) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking (Hardcover)

    So, here you are, reading this review. That alone is enough for me to tell you that if you’re intrigued and thinking maybe you want to own Modernist Cuisine, then I can answer all of your concerns and questions right now by saying YES! YOU WILL NOT BE DISAPPOINTED! Just click the button and order it, and settle back and read the rest of this review while you wait for delivery :)

    Does MC live up to its hype? Yes it does. Is it relatively expensive as cookbooks go? Well, on a pound-for-pound basis, no, not really. Sure, in absolute terms something like $450-$625 for a “Cookbook” will seem crazy to many, but their error will be in pigeonholing MC as “Just a Cookbook”, which is like categorizing a Ferrari as “just another car”.

    Are the authors of MC the ultimate Gods of Cooking? Well, no, not necessarily. They have their own viewpoint which becomes pretty clear after reading through any amount of the text, but still their contribution to the science and practice of cooking is huge, and their resulting construction (this set of books) is worthy of ownership for ANYONE interested in food OR cooking.

    Reading MC is like reading McGee’s On Food and Cooking, but with actual practical advice, actual recipes, and incredible illustrations.

    So, misconceptions: “This book is only for the Molecular Gastronomy crowd”. Really not true. There’s surprisingly little Xtreme Cooking in the first three volumes. This set has a HUGE amount of general information that will be relevant and interesting to any cook, and indeed any lover of food. Even if you find the plated dish recipes in volume five to be inaccessible to you, you (yes YOU) will get an amazing amount of useful and fascinating information out of the first four volumes (at least).

    Another one: “No mortal can actually cook any of the recipes in this book”. Well, there are a few like their Mac & Cheese that pretty much anyone can probably do, but the majority of the recipes in the book become accessible as soon as you’re willing to acquire the capability of cooking Sous Vide, which does not seem at all unreasonable. But even if you never cook a single recipe out of this set, you can easily get your money’s worth from it just for the knowledge about food and cooking that it will impart to you.

    What will you find in here? Lots of information you won’t find anywhere else. This might not be the *only* book you need to own on cooking, but if you don’t have a copy then your world will be seriously incomplete. Here’s a quick rundown of the contents:

    Volume one: History, Microbiology for Cooks, Food Safety, Food and Health, Energy, Water. The history section is interesting, but honestly the book really pick up until it starts talking about really practical stuff. In this respect, volume one, while fascinating, is the most boring of the lot. There’s lots of interesting stuff packed into the Food Safety chapter for example, but in later volumes the authors seem to play more fast and loose with some of the safety issues. But this volume sets the standards and the basis for using the cooking techniques in the rest of the set safely. The food and Health section can be summarized as “Honestly we don’t know very much about nutrition.” and “It’s probably not so much what you eat as how much you eat.”. The authors give many examples of where the “common wisdom” about nutrition from the last 20-30 years actually turns out to be unjustifiable once the high-quality long-term studies are in. The chapter on the physics of Water sets the stage for perhaps the most core scientific principal that permeates the rest of the book: the way that water affects almost everything in cooking.

    Volume two: Techniques and Equipment. Covers all the traditional cooking methods (grilling, pan-frying, etc., etc.) and for each it provides interesting and scientifically useful information about how it *really* works. Again, almost nothing in here is specific to Molecular Gastronomy type cooking. It’s all really useful information that anyone can use, especially the backyard BBQ aficionado. In addition, this volume covers cooking Sous Vide in depth. Chapter 10 covers equipment for the Modernist Kitchen, and while it’s easy to be scared off by the fact that they include a $10,000-$30,000 centrifuge in the “Must-have tools for the Modernist Kitchen” list, the reality is that having some form of vacuum sealer and a temperature controlled water bath for Sous Vide cooking will cover the majority of the techniques in the book. Sure they cover lots of Xtreme techniques, but, again, the reality is that a much higher percentage of the information in the book will be relevant, or at least interesting, to almost any reader.

    Volume three: Animals and Plants. More than you ever wanted to know about how animal muscle flesh becomes meat, how it behaves chemically, under various forms of cooking etc. Lots of practical advice about how…

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