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6 votes
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Chefs are using fungus to transform food garbage into fancy, fully edible dishes
14 votes -
From animal protein without animals, dairy without cows, silk without worms, palm oil without deforestation, the options are endless
13 votes -
Why do so many recipes call for powdered sugar instead of regular sugar?
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing...
This is a question I've been wondering about for a while as a home baker and amateur food scientist. Why do recipes for whipped, fluffy desert components like whipped cream or buttercream icing always seem to call for powdered sugar? If I want to add sugar to a something, why would I also want to add the anti-caking agent (usually starch I think) for powdered sugar as well? Is that starch actually something beneficial for a whipped desert? Because as far as I can tell, the only time powdered sugar makes sense is when it's dusted on top of something or incorporated into a desert that is being mixed by hand and doesn't have the shear of a mixer to dissolve or emulsify the granulated sugar. And I've never had any issues just using regular granulated sugar and honestly prefer it to powdered sugar for icings, whipped cream and the like. If a recipe calls for powdered sugar, but it's being combined with a mixer or beaters I just use regular sugar and the results are great.
Anyone have any thoughts or experience as to what I'm overlooking? Or is it just a hold over from a time when electric mixers weren't common and you needed a finer sugar to incorporate the sugar by hand?
18 votes -
The banana apocalypse is coming. Can we stop it this time?
25 votes -
Modernist cuisine Bread School - free with email sign up
10 votes -
A chemist explains the chemistry behind decaf coffee. Three methods strive to retain the bean's flavor while removing its caffeine.
13 votes -
‘Goldmine’ collection of wheat from 100 years ago may help feed the world, scientists say
25 votes -
Swiss scientists invent a new type of chocolate using more of the cocoa plant, reducing need for additional sugars
31 votes -
Meet the Finnish biotech startup bringing a long lost mycoprotein to your plate – proprietary single-cell fungus-based protein was originally developed by local paper industry
5 votes -
Behold, the $400 red pineapple
20 votes -
Cold brew coffee in three minutes using acoustic cavitation
20 votes -
On-demand nutrient production system for long-duration space missions
12 votes -
What the first astronauts (and cosmonauts) ate - Food in space
3 votes -
Artisan roastery based in the Finnish capital has introduced a coffee blend that has been developed by artificial intelligence
5 votes -
What cooking techniques need more evidence?
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do....
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do.
Which are the tips that need more evidence?
Here are two that I struggle with, about stainless steel pans:
- Water drop test / leidenfrost
People say that if you get your pan hot enough to get the leidenfrost effect and then add the oil you'll have less problems with sticking. My problem with this is that it means the pan gets very very hot - much hotter than it needs to be for most uses. My other problem is they all say "Look, I'll cook eggs and they won't stick" and those videos either have a ton of cuts, or the eggs stick and you can see the person pushing with a spatula to get rid of the stick, or their "scrambled eggs" is really a chopped omelette.
- Heat the pan before adding oil. I don't understand this. Again, people say it helps prevent sticking, but they use some argument about "pores" which just feels hokey. I add cold oil to a cold pan and bring it up to temperature before adding food so the pan and oil are both at the right temperature, and food sticks and then releases, because that's how stainless pans work.
I'm aware I could be completely wrong here and that there may be a good evidence base for these, but they don't seem to work based on how I cook.
37 votes -
Tastes like chicken? Think again—edible ants have distinctive flavor profiles.
16 votes -
The health impacts of red meat - reviewing a recent study and current recommendations
10 votes -
Analysis of a common preservative used to kill pathogens in food shows that it also affects beneficial bacteria
19 votes -
Food scientists at Finnish startup SuperGround have found a way to make chicken nuggets and fish cakes out of otherwise discarded bones and hard tissues
28 votes -
Coffee connoisseurs have long believed that adding a little water to beans before grinding them makes a difference. A new study by researchers at the University of Oregon seems to confirm exactly why.
35 votes -
99% of the world’s bananas are threatened by a fungus. To save them, scientists are turning to genetic modification.
24 votes -
Red, juicy, heat resistant: The hunt for a climate-proof apple
9 votes -
More than twenty-year-old assumption about beer aroma disproved
12 votes -
You say tomato, these scientists say evolutionary mystery
6 votes -
Is this the protein plant of the future? New study finds ‘sweetness gene’ that makes lupins tastier
16 votes -
A list of commonly recommended cookery books
Here's a list of cookery books that are frequently recommended in various forums when people ask for good cookery books. These are not in any kind of order. Please add any books that I've missed!...
Here's a list of cookery books that are frequently recommended in various forums when people ask for good cookery books.
These are not in any kind of order. Please add any books that I've missed! I'm sure there are lots of great books that I haven't heard of. I wanted to link to a bookshop, but I got stuck with that so I used Wordery, unless they didn't have it in which case I link to Amazon. Some of these books have hardback and soft-cover versions, or newer editions, so go careful with the links because I just link to any version of the book. I have done no research at all into the authors or illustrators here, so if I've included people who are toxic arseholes please do let me know and I'll fix it. (This post is episode 2 of "DanBC goes down a rabbit hole and dumps the results onto Tildes").
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat: Mastering the Elements of Good Cooking - Samin Nosrat and Wendy MacNaughton.
A review from Kitchn: 8 cooks on why "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" is such a special, unlikely, hit
A lot of people love this book. Beginners say it gave them a bit more confidence, and good home cooks say it helped elevate their cooking by giving them usable information.
How to Cook Everything - Mark Bittman.
How to Cook Everything - the basics - Mark Bittman. A review from ShelfAwareness.
A lot of people don't know how to cook, and have never cooked anything. Mark Bittman's books are often recommended to this group of people. And the books are excellent sources of information, and so they're useful to lots of people. They're very clear and easy to use.
Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking - Marcella Hazan.
A VERY SHORT, almost bullet point, review from FiveBooks And a longer review from LitHub
She wrote two books in the 1970s, and these were combined and updated in the 1990s for this book. These books are widely credited as introducing people outside Italy to "authentic" Italian cooking. LitHub review has already said everything that I'd want to say about this, but better than I could.
On Food and Cooking: The science and lore of the kitchen - Harold McGee.
This is a heavy duty book about the science of food. It's often described as the best single reference book for the science of food and cooking.
Food Lab: Better home cooking through science - J. Kenji López-Alt.
A review from Chemistry World
Surely everyone knows J. Kenji. He's really approachable. He give you science, but it's actionable and achievable.
In Bibi's Kitchen: The Recipes and Stories of Grandmothers from the Eight African Countries that Touch the Indian Ocean - Hawa Hassan, Julia Turshen.
A mini-review from Kitchn. So, I'm cheating here because I haven't seen this recommended by anyone but I wanted more books that are not Euro-US focussed. This book focuses on food from Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa, Madagascar, and Comoros
Each chapter starts with a short geo-political intro. You'll be familiar if you've ever read the CIA World Factbook. It then has a short interview with a grandmother, and then it gives some recipes.
Sauces: Classical and Contemporary Sauce Making - Wordery link - James Peterson.
A review from MostlyFood
"Don’t be put off by the size of this book. It’s true that it’s as big as a small piece of furniture but it’s as big as that for a good reason. There isn’t any padding in Sauces. It’s cover-to-cover solid information that will be welcomed by anyone wanting to perfect sauce-making. Nothing seems to be omitted or overlooked. Every imaginable sauce is described, including Asian Sauces which have been added since the publication of the first edition."
Lots of people like that "no padding" feature.
How to Eat: The pleasures and principles of good food - Nigella Lawson.
A review by Food 52
"Thinking back on the lifespan of this formative book, I can’t help but feel that it’s to the recipes in it, and of course to Lawson herself, that I owe much of my confidence in the kitchen today."
Lots of people just want to cook tasty food and they're not bothered by The Science. Lawson's books are excellent if you want great home cooking.
The Professional Chef - The Culinary Institute of America
There are lots of versions of this book. The current version will be expensive. The older version are usually very similar and will be much cheaper.
Home cooks often get into weird habits and that's fine - it's your kitchen, do what works for you. But if you want to get better in the kitchen by improving your techniques and skills this is the book for you.
25 votes -
Eating foods consumed at higher temperatures may increase cancer risk due to heat-damaged DNA
22 votes -
Why it took thirteen years to engineer the Taco Bell Crunchwrap
8 votes -
The vertical farming bubble is finally popping
20 votes -
High tech meets agriculture in Denmark – strategic investments mean country may one day become a major exporter of farming technology
3 votes -
Food giant Unilever is planning a dairy ice cream that uses milk that doesn’t come from a cow
11 votes -
The inside scoop on ice cream innovation – a Tetra Pak product development centre where future recipes and technology are tested out
6 votes -
Why modern sandwich bread is different from 'real' bread
6 votes -
Can lab-grown dairy proteins give us a cow-free future? | Lab-Grown
6 votes -
How humanity has changed the food it eats
3 votes -
Two acre vertical farm run by AI and robots out-produces 720-acre flat farm
21 votes -
No-kill, lab-grown meat to go on sale for first time. Singapore’s approval of chicken cells grown in bioreactors is seen as landmark moment across industry.
14 votes -
The race to redesign sugar
5 votes -
Can Sweden's 'vertical farms' solve global food shortages?
4 votes -
Should tomatoes go in the fridge? Apparently, it doesn't matter much: the variety of tomato is much more important.
7 votes -
Inside the mad-science world of a professional fermentation chef
4 votes -
There’s an entire industry dedicated to making foods crispy
8 votes -
Flavor networks reveal universal principle behind successful recipes
5 votes -
So long, salt and vinegar: How crisp flavours went from simple to sensational
15 votes -
Inside the launch of the Cosmic Crisp apple, the “largest launch of a produce item in American history”
9 votes -
Would you eat a burger made out of CO2 captured from the air?
9 votes -
The status of vertical farming at the end of 2018 - a summary
13 votes -
How to get that great “hoppy” beer taste without the exploding bottles
6 votes -
Cheese played a surprisingly important role in human evolution
10 votes