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What Einstein Told His Cook: Kitchen Science Explained (2002)

What Einstein Told His Cook: Kitchen Science Explained (2002)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.83 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0393011836 (ISBN13: 9780393011838)
Language
English
Publisher
w. w. norton & company

About book What Einstein Told His Cook: Kitchen Science Explained (2002)

Confession: this was a free dl and I only clicked on it because I misread it as "What Einstein told his Cock".It's quite interesting though. I now know why tea made from microwaved water doesn't taste as good as water boiled in a kettle. It has quite a bit to do with nucleation sites. I understand what a nucleation site does (it gets molecules excited and they jump around when hot and boil over or am I still thinking of cocks here?) but I don't understand how they suddenly arise when they weren't there before.Another really interesting and useful piece of information was how to get more juice from a lemon. Do you know Led Zeppelin's 'The Lemon Song', where Robert Plant sings, "Squeeze me baby, till the juice runs down my leg." That's a lot of juice! And the book tells you how to get much more juice than just an ordinary squeeze would do.There are myths about rolling the lemon around first or heating it up (in a microwave) but apparently neither of these will increase the juice yield at all. What will increase it is doing both. Roll it around first and then microwave it and it will increase the juice yield by 23% if you hand-squeeze it. Mechanical squeezing won't be affected though. (Robert Plant only liked hand-squeezing I think). Interesting as the book was, I think a book about Einstein having a chat with his private parts might have been even more so.

I rather enjoyed this. I'm a bit of a science geek and, of course, always looking for connections from the stuff I teach to the real world--keepin' it real, so to speak. So, it was nice to recognize a number of concepts I've taughts, in both junior high and high school. The science was well explained, but not over explained. It was easy to understand, though someone without a science background might have to work a little harder at it. I like how he 'myth-busted' certain culinary legends, and went about testing others. Some of the concepts he explained were things I learned in university, but I felt that people with no more than high school science would be able to follow the explanation. And, I'm a firm believer that, as much as possible, we should understand the why of things, so that we don't become 'sheeple'.This would have been a 5 star rating, except that I found need the end I was getting tired of it. Although, that could just be summer sucking away at my attention span as well.

Do You like book What Einstein Told His Cook: Kitchen Science Explained (2002)?

Oh, I loved this book. I had borrowed this from my sister and I realized I did not want to give it back, so I have now ordered my own copy. There are things I want to highlight and pages I want to put markers on. As a cook I was enthralled and from a scientific aspect I was spellbound. I loved the witty and even smart-aleck humor: Q -- " 'After I roast a chicken, there are all these ooky drippings in the pan. Can I use them for anything?' Answer -- 'No. If you have to ask, you don't deserve them. Pour off the fat, scrape the rest of the "ook" into a jar, and ship it to me by overnight express.' " These words sing to a southern cook. :) If you have any curiosity at all about foods and the tools we use with them, just order a copy for yourself.
—Penny

Although the author sounds like a bit of a pretentious douchbag once or twice, I enjoyed this book a lot. It's divided into very short sections, so it's great for the bathroom or very quick spurts. (Oh, no pun intended, yet I leave that in.) It's also nice as a second book by the bedside. For example, while I was trying to read "The Rest is Noise," which taxed my attention and brain too much, I would end the night with a few pages of this much lighter book. It wasn't anything earth-shattering, but pleasant enough. If you're interested in the topic, I recommend it as a very low-committment fling.
—Ashvin

This book is interesting and well written, quite a page turner actually. However, the structure of the work is to answer questions on various topics. For example, I read the Salt of the Earth Chapter, which features answers to questions such as: - What are all those special salts and meat tenderizers in the supermarket? - What are salt substitutes? - Why add salt to the water when boiling pasta?- Whats so special about sea salt? Kosher salt? Freshly ground salt?- Can a potato remove the excess salt from over-salted soup?- Why do recipes tell you to use unsalted butter and then add salt?etc.Some of these questions have little interest to me, some are things I've wondered myself. While Wolke's answers are both delightfully colorful and practically instructive, after reading the book, I feel as if I haven't really learned much beyond some random trivia. And because the work doesn't focus on concepts for cooking (but rather the answering of questions under the topic of salt, meat, fats, sugars, etc.), I don't think I have improved as a cook either.If you are looking for a fun read, this book will satisfy. If you are looking for instruction on the science of cooking beyond what you get in a thorough cook book, I think you will want to look elsewhere. I know I did.... I'm going to return this book and try Harold McGee's "On Cooking and Science.." next.
—Ebookwormy

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