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Kitchen Science
              &
Modern Culinary Insights Of The
        21st Century
Contents
• History of Food Science

• What is Molecular Gastronomy

• Taste perception

• Aroma compounds

• Food pairing

• Hydrocolloids

• E number basics

• Useful resources
Food Science in History
•   Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier (1743-1794) French chemist. Recognised the importance of utilizing
    scientific methods to understand food. Studied the process of stock preparation in 1783

•   Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford (1753-1814) Anglo-American physicist. His work included
    extensive investigations of the construction of fire places and kitchen utensils, Believed in
    improving the work of chefs by improving their tools in the kitchen using a scientific understanding

•   Jean Anthelme Brillat Savarin (1755-1826) French lawyer with a background and a great interest in
    chemistry and medicine. Brillat Savarin is the author of The physiology of taste from 1825, a classic
    book in gastronomy. The book takes a scientific and philosophical look at food and is concerned
    with good food and health issues

•   Justus von Liebig (1803-1873) German chemist. He started a production of commercial beef
    extract, which was to become the precursor of the bouillon cube

•   Edouard de Pomaine (1875-1964) French scientist and food writer. He explained the scientific
    principles of several traditional preparation techniques in order to demystify cooking . He argues
    that cooking can be considered a scientific technique

•   Nicholas Kurti (1908-1998). Hungarian physicist at Oxford University specialising in low-
    temperature physics A key person in exploring the gap between food science and cooking and
    defining a new sub-field of food science aiming at the restaurant and domestic kitchen.
Foundations of Molecular Gastronomy
• In 1969 Nicholas Kurti gave a lecture with the title ‘The physicist in
  the kitchen’

• In the 1980’s Hervé This, a French chemist, investigated culinary
  proverbs in his lab in Paris.

• Harold McGee, an American food writer with a degree in science
  and literature, In 1984 the first edition of On Food and Cooking

• In 1986 Hervé This and Nicholas Kurti collaborate on their cooking
  experiments

• In 1992 Kurti, This and McGee organized “International Workshop
  of Molecular and Physical Gastronomy”
Popular Evolution of Molecular
                 Gastronomy
•   1997 elbulli workshop, the first systematic research centre for a three-star
    restaurant was opened

•   Since the late 90s Molecular Gastronomy has become popularised by the media
    as a result of the science focused culinary innovations of chefs including Ferran
    Adria, Pierre Gagnaire and Heston Blumenthal

•   2003 Pere Castells, a scientist and gourmet joined the science department in
    elBullitaller. Establishing a dialogue with the science world

•   In 2006 popular chefs, known for their novel and scientific approach to wrote a
    ‘Statement on New Cookery’ in which they declared that ‘Molecular Gastronomy’
    doesn’t describe their style of cooking or any type of cooking

•   2009 Herve This introduces ‘Note by Note’ cooking

•   2010 Harvard begins Food and Science course and lectures

•   2011 Nathan Myhrvold, created Modernist Cuisine book
Defining Molecular Gastronomy
• Molecular gastronomy is a particular branch of
  physical chemistry, looking at the mechanisms
  of phenomena occurring during culinary
  transformations

• This discipline is not really interested in
  cuisine, and only looks for new phenomena,
  new mechanisms
Defining Molecular Gastronomy
• In 1996, five goals of this science were identified:

• (1) To collect and investigate old wives’ tales about cooking
• (2) To model and scrutinize existing recipes
• (3) To introduce new tools, products, and methods to cooking
• (4) To invent new dishes using knowledge from the previous three
  aims
• (5) to use the appeal of food to promote science

• A more precise definition was given in 2003: it was
  recognized that all recipes are made of two parts.
    – The definition of the dish
    – ‘culinary precisions’
The Definition of a Dish
 • Complex Disperse Systems can be used to
   classify food preparations
 •   O (oil, any liquid fat, such as olive oil, but also melted foie gras, melted cocoa
     butter)
 •   G (gas, air)
 •   W (water, that is, any aqueous solution)
 •   S1, S2, S3… (solids of any kind)

For example:
The process of whipping cream can be written: O/W + G → (G+O)/W.

Also: This formalism can be used to describe new physical systems :
(G+O+S1)/W)/S2
refers to a dish made of a gel that contains a water solution where air bubbles, solid
particles and oil droplets are dispersed
The Study of Precisions
 • Detailed descriptions of the processes involved in preparing a dish,
   technical indications along with old wives tales, proverbs, sayings and so
   on

 • Since 1980, more than 20,000 culinary precisions have been collected,
   mostly from French cookery books

For example: Chefs cook green beans in boiling salty water; when the beans are cooked

They are strained, then immediately refreshed in icy cold water in order to, chefs say, “fix
the chlorophyll”. When asked, chefs admit that “fixing the chlorophyll” means keeping the
brilliant green colour of vegetables

But they forget that raw green beans are actually less green than when they are cooked! Is
icy cold water useful to keep the green colour? Having observed that cold water has no
effect on the visual aspect of green beans, in ordinary culinary conditions
Definition of New Cooking
‘Statement of the ‘new cookery’ comprises four key points:

• Three basic principles guide our cooking: Excellence, openness, and
  integrity

• Our cooking values tradition, builds on it, and along with tradition is
  part of the ongoing evolution of our craft

• We embrace innovation— new ingredients, techniques, appliances,
  information, and ideas—whenever it can make a real contribution to
  our cooking.

• We believe that cooking can affect people in profound ways, and that a
  spirit of collaboration and sharing is essential to true progress in
  developing this potential.
Definition of Note by Note Cooking
• The idea is to use pure molecules to make new food

• It's like a painter using primary colours or a musician composing
  note by note

• It involves taking the molecules that compose ingredients used in
  cooking, and using these as the raw ingredients for a dish

• “If you use pure compounds, you open up billions and billions of
  new possibilities” (This)

• Investigating flavours and dishes which were never envisioned using
  traditional food ingredients
Definition of Modernist Cuisine
• Dining is a dialogue

• Creativity trumps tradition

• Break rules; surprise diners

• Be inventive – mere copying is uninteresting

• Science and technology are sources of inspiration and tools, but are only a
  means to an end

• Great food is built from great ingredients

• How foods are grown, harvested and slaughtered matters

• New ingredients create new possibilities
Modern Culinary Insights Of The
        21st Century
Taste Perception
Taste Perception
Taste                                              Flavour
•   Each of these taste sensations probably
    evolved to provide information about           •   When food is consumed, the interaction
    foods that are particularly desirable (e.g.,       of taste, odor and textural feeling provides
    salt, sugar, amino acids) or undesirable           an overall sensation which is best defined
    (e.g., toxic alkaloids)                            by the English word “flavor

•   Taste buds, are bud-shaped groups of           •   Flavor results from compounds that are
    cells. Tastants, the molecules being tasted,       divided into two broad classes:
    enter a small pore at the top of the taste         Those responsible for taste and those
    bud                                                responsible for odors

•   Each of these taste buds is capable of
    detecting all five “flavors”.
Taste Perception
Palatability                                Food Acceptability
•   Our experience of foods is              •   In addition to the actual signals from
    mediated through all our senses:            the sensors, there are further,
    these include all the familiar senses
    (pain, touch, sight, hearing, taste,        perhaps surprising ways in which we
    and smell)                                  perceive the environment around us
                                                which can significantly affect the
•   Texture plays a major role in our           flavor of the food we are eating
    recognition of foods
                                            •   Try eating the same food using either
•   Vision is active in texture                 high-quality china plates and steel or
    perception when we see the food             silver cutlery or paper plates and
                                                plastic cutlery; the food seems to
•   Additionally, audition, somesthesis,        taste better with the perceived
    and kinesthesis are active during           quality of the utensils
    handling of the food
Aroma Compounds

• Aroma substances are volatile compounds which are perceived by
  the odor receptor sites of the smell organ

• When eating a food the initial olfactory stimulation takes place as
  we smell the aroma of the food before the food is in the mouth
  (orthonasal detection)

• Olfactory stimulation takes place via the throat after being released
  by chewing (retronasal detection)

• There is the hypothesis that if two foods have one or more key
  odorants in common it might very well be that go well together and
  perhaps even compliment each other
Food Pairing
•   Foods may combine with each other when they have major flavour compounds
    (chemicals) in common

•   The more compounds food products share the better they should match

•   Compound concentration and the detection threshold

•   A recent Harvard University study of 56,000 recipes concluded that food pairing
    hypothesis holds in Western Europe and North America. But in Southern Europe
    and East Asia a converse principle of antipairing seems to be at work

•   Food pairing results are dominated by just a few ingredients in each region. In
    North America these are foods such as milk, butter, cocoa, vanilla, cream, and egg.
    In East Asia they are foods like beef, ginger, pork, cayenne, chicken, and onion.
Hydrocolloids
• Hydrocolloids are often called gums

• They are naturally present or added to control the functional
  properties of aqueous foodstuffs

• Uses include:
    –   Thickening
    –   Gelling
    –   Water binding
    –   Emulsion stabilization

• The degree with which the hydrocolloid solutions mix with saliva,
  determined by their degree of chain entanglement, determines flavor
  perception
Hydrocolloids
• Many hydrocolloids are derived from natural sources, such
  as seaweed, seeds, roots, tree sap, fruit peels, etc.

• They have the ability to thicken and form gels at very low
  concentrations

• With the exception of gelatin (which is a protein), all
  hydrocolloids are polysaccharides, or complex sugars


• Examples: Corn flour, flour, gelatine, Agar-Agar, Pectin,
  Carrageen, Xanthan Gum, Maltodextrin, Sodium Alginate
E Numbers
•   E numbers idnetify the 319 food additives approved for a specific use in Europe.

•   They have different uses, including colours, preservatives, stabilizers, gelling agents, acidity
    regulators, flavour enhancers and sweeteners.

•   Some additives are naturally occurring and others are manufactured by the chemical industry.

•   Our bodies naturally create 20 different E number compounds, whether or not the food that we eat
    contains them.

•   Our bodies contain over 90 different E compounds sourced from natural unprocessed food.

•   47 E numbers are approved for use in organic food (which means food can contain these and still qualify as
    ‘organic’)

•   The WHO (World Health Organisation) establishes ADI (Acceptable Daily Intake)

•   MSG (Mono Sodium Glutamate) is one of the world’s most widely used flavour enhancers and the world’s
    most demonized food additive. However there is no robust clinical evidence to prove that there’s much
    wrong with MSG. Our bodies produce 50g of glutamate every day independently of food we eat.
2011/2012 Culinary Trends
• Chefs are the new historians
   – Grant Achatz’s -menu titled “Paris, 1906,” - the cooking of Auguste Escoffier
   – Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, includes dates next to each item.
   – Montreal’s Joe Beef restaurant devotes an entire chapter to the vanished
     cuisine of North America’s railway dining cars

• “Rotten” doesn’t have to be a dirty word
   – Long welcomed in cheese, pickles, cured meats and sauces
   – Chefs are perfecting house-fermented foods like soy, miso paste and kimchi
   – David Chang (Momofuku chain) gave a lecture about edible bacteria at
     Harvard last month

• Elite chefs and producers learn to share
   – Harvard lectures
   – Omnivore Food Festival
   – Gastronomica
2011/2012 Culinary Trends
• Vegetables are the new meat
   – Greater emphasis on respecting the integrity and status of
     vegetables

• The word “restaurant” is over
   – Pop-ups (Thomas Keller – Harrods, Pierre Koffmann - Selfridges)
   – Food trucks (Jun Tanaka – Street Kitchen)
   – Supper clubs (Nuno Mendes – The Loft, Stuart Langley -
     Disappearing Dining Club

• “Local” doesn’t just mean local any more
   – Noma

• Wine is so overrated
   – Beer & cocktail pairings
Useful Resources
•   kitchen-theory.com
•   blog.khymos.org
•   foodpairing.be
•   understandingfoodadditives.org
•   modernistcuisine.com
•   exploratorium.edu
•   flavornet.org
•   umamiinfo.com

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Molecular gastronomy introduction

  • 1. Kitchen Science & Modern Culinary Insights Of The 21st Century
  • 2. Contents • History of Food Science • What is Molecular Gastronomy • Taste perception • Aroma compounds • Food pairing • Hydrocolloids • E number basics • Useful resources
  • 3. Food Science in History • Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier (1743-1794) French chemist. Recognised the importance of utilizing scientific methods to understand food. Studied the process of stock preparation in 1783 • Benjamin Thompson, Count Rumford (1753-1814) Anglo-American physicist. His work included extensive investigations of the construction of fire places and kitchen utensils, Believed in improving the work of chefs by improving their tools in the kitchen using a scientific understanding • Jean Anthelme Brillat Savarin (1755-1826) French lawyer with a background and a great interest in chemistry and medicine. Brillat Savarin is the author of The physiology of taste from 1825, a classic book in gastronomy. The book takes a scientific and philosophical look at food and is concerned with good food and health issues • Justus von Liebig (1803-1873) German chemist. He started a production of commercial beef extract, which was to become the precursor of the bouillon cube • Edouard de Pomaine (1875-1964) French scientist and food writer. He explained the scientific principles of several traditional preparation techniques in order to demystify cooking . He argues that cooking can be considered a scientific technique • Nicholas Kurti (1908-1998). Hungarian physicist at Oxford University specialising in low- temperature physics A key person in exploring the gap between food science and cooking and defining a new sub-field of food science aiming at the restaurant and domestic kitchen.
  • 4. Foundations of Molecular Gastronomy • In 1969 Nicholas Kurti gave a lecture with the title ‘The physicist in the kitchen’ • In the 1980’s Hervé This, a French chemist, investigated culinary proverbs in his lab in Paris. • Harold McGee, an American food writer with a degree in science and literature, In 1984 the first edition of On Food and Cooking • In 1986 Hervé This and Nicholas Kurti collaborate on their cooking experiments • In 1992 Kurti, This and McGee organized “International Workshop of Molecular and Physical Gastronomy”
  • 5. Popular Evolution of Molecular Gastronomy • 1997 elbulli workshop, the first systematic research centre for a three-star restaurant was opened • Since the late 90s Molecular Gastronomy has become popularised by the media as a result of the science focused culinary innovations of chefs including Ferran Adria, Pierre Gagnaire and Heston Blumenthal • 2003 Pere Castells, a scientist and gourmet joined the science department in elBullitaller. Establishing a dialogue with the science world • In 2006 popular chefs, known for their novel and scientific approach to wrote a ‘Statement on New Cookery’ in which they declared that ‘Molecular Gastronomy’ doesn’t describe their style of cooking or any type of cooking • 2009 Herve This introduces ‘Note by Note’ cooking • 2010 Harvard begins Food and Science course and lectures • 2011 Nathan Myhrvold, created Modernist Cuisine book
  • 6. Defining Molecular Gastronomy • Molecular gastronomy is a particular branch of physical chemistry, looking at the mechanisms of phenomena occurring during culinary transformations • This discipline is not really interested in cuisine, and only looks for new phenomena, new mechanisms
  • 7. Defining Molecular Gastronomy • In 1996, five goals of this science were identified: • (1) To collect and investigate old wives’ tales about cooking • (2) To model and scrutinize existing recipes • (3) To introduce new tools, products, and methods to cooking • (4) To invent new dishes using knowledge from the previous three aims • (5) to use the appeal of food to promote science • A more precise definition was given in 2003: it was recognized that all recipes are made of two parts. – The definition of the dish – ‘culinary precisions’
  • 8. The Definition of a Dish • Complex Disperse Systems can be used to classify food preparations • O (oil, any liquid fat, such as olive oil, but also melted foie gras, melted cocoa butter) • G (gas, air) • W (water, that is, any aqueous solution) • S1, S2, S3… (solids of any kind) For example: The process of whipping cream can be written: O/W + G → (G+O)/W. Also: This formalism can be used to describe new physical systems : (G+O+S1)/W)/S2 refers to a dish made of a gel that contains a water solution where air bubbles, solid particles and oil droplets are dispersed
  • 9. The Study of Precisions • Detailed descriptions of the processes involved in preparing a dish, technical indications along with old wives tales, proverbs, sayings and so on • Since 1980, more than 20,000 culinary precisions have been collected, mostly from French cookery books For example: Chefs cook green beans in boiling salty water; when the beans are cooked They are strained, then immediately refreshed in icy cold water in order to, chefs say, “fix the chlorophyll”. When asked, chefs admit that “fixing the chlorophyll” means keeping the brilliant green colour of vegetables But they forget that raw green beans are actually less green than when they are cooked! Is icy cold water useful to keep the green colour? Having observed that cold water has no effect on the visual aspect of green beans, in ordinary culinary conditions
  • 10. Definition of New Cooking ‘Statement of the ‘new cookery’ comprises four key points: • Three basic principles guide our cooking: Excellence, openness, and integrity • Our cooking values tradition, builds on it, and along with tradition is part of the ongoing evolution of our craft • We embrace innovation— new ingredients, techniques, appliances, information, and ideas—whenever it can make a real contribution to our cooking. • We believe that cooking can affect people in profound ways, and that a spirit of collaboration and sharing is essential to true progress in developing this potential.
  • 11. Definition of Note by Note Cooking • The idea is to use pure molecules to make new food • It's like a painter using primary colours or a musician composing note by note • It involves taking the molecules that compose ingredients used in cooking, and using these as the raw ingredients for a dish • “If you use pure compounds, you open up billions and billions of new possibilities” (This) • Investigating flavours and dishes which were never envisioned using traditional food ingredients
  • 12. Definition of Modernist Cuisine • Dining is a dialogue • Creativity trumps tradition • Break rules; surprise diners • Be inventive – mere copying is uninteresting • Science and technology are sources of inspiration and tools, but are only a means to an end • Great food is built from great ingredients • How foods are grown, harvested and slaughtered matters • New ingredients create new possibilities
  • 13. Modern Culinary Insights Of The 21st Century
  • 15. Taste Perception Taste Flavour • Each of these taste sensations probably evolved to provide information about • When food is consumed, the interaction foods that are particularly desirable (e.g., of taste, odor and textural feeling provides salt, sugar, amino acids) or undesirable an overall sensation which is best defined (e.g., toxic alkaloids) by the English word “flavor • Taste buds, are bud-shaped groups of • Flavor results from compounds that are cells. Tastants, the molecules being tasted, divided into two broad classes: enter a small pore at the top of the taste Those responsible for taste and those bud responsible for odors • Each of these taste buds is capable of detecting all five “flavors”.
  • 16. Taste Perception Palatability Food Acceptability • Our experience of foods is • In addition to the actual signals from mediated through all our senses: the sensors, there are further, these include all the familiar senses (pain, touch, sight, hearing, taste, perhaps surprising ways in which we and smell) perceive the environment around us which can significantly affect the • Texture plays a major role in our flavor of the food we are eating recognition of foods • Try eating the same food using either • Vision is active in texture high-quality china plates and steel or perception when we see the food silver cutlery or paper plates and plastic cutlery; the food seems to • Additionally, audition, somesthesis, taste better with the perceived and kinesthesis are active during quality of the utensils handling of the food
  • 17. Aroma Compounds • Aroma substances are volatile compounds which are perceived by the odor receptor sites of the smell organ • When eating a food the initial olfactory stimulation takes place as we smell the aroma of the food before the food is in the mouth (orthonasal detection) • Olfactory stimulation takes place via the throat after being released by chewing (retronasal detection) • There is the hypothesis that if two foods have one or more key odorants in common it might very well be that go well together and perhaps even compliment each other
  • 18. Food Pairing • Foods may combine with each other when they have major flavour compounds (chemicals) in common • The more compounds food products share the better they should match • Compound concentration and the detection threshold • A recent Harvard University study of 56,000 recipes concluded that food pairing hypothesis holds in Western Europe and North America. But in Southern Europe and East Asia a converse principle of antipairing seems to be at work • Food pairing results are dominated by just a few ingredients in each region. In North America these are foods such as milk, butter, cocoa, vanilla, cream, and egg. In East Asia they are foods like beef, ginger, pork, cayenne, chicken, and onion.
  • 19.
  • 20. Hydrocolloids • Hydrocolloids are often called gums • They are naturally present or added to control the functional properties of aqueous foodstuffs • Uses include: – Thickening – Gelling – Water binding – Emulsion stabilization • The degree with which the hydrocolloid solutions mix with saliva, determined by their degree of chain entanglement, determines flavor perception
  • 21. Hydrocolloids • Many hydrocolloids are derived from natural sources, such as seaweed, seeds, roots, tree sap, fruit peels, etc. • They have the ability to thicken and form gels at very low concentrations • With the exception of gelatin (which is a protein), all hydrocolloids are polysaccharides, or complex sugars • Examples: Corn flour, flour, gelatine, Agar-Agar, Pectin, Carrageen, Xanthan Gum, Maltodextrin, Sodium Alginate
  • 22. E Numbers • E numbers idnetify the 319 food additives approved for a specific use in Europe. • They have different uses, including colours, preservatives, stabilizers, gelling agents, acidity regulators, flavour enhancers and sweeteners. • Some additives are naturally occurring and others are manufactured by the chemical industry. • Our bodies naturally create 20 different E number compounds, whether or not the food that we eat contains them. • Our bodies contain over 90 different E compounds sourced from natural unprocessed food. • 47 E numbers are approved for use in organic food (which means food can contain these and still qualify as ‘organic’) • The WHO (World Health Organisation) establishes ADI (Acceptable Daily Intake) • MSG (Mono Sodium Glutamate) is one of the world’s most widely used flavour enhancers and the world’s most demonized food additive. However there is no robust clinical evidence to prove that there’s much wrong with MSG. Our bodies produce 50g of glutamate every day independently of food we eat.
  • 23. 2011/2012 Culinary Trends • Chefs are the new historians – Grant Achatz’s -menu titled “Paris, 1906,” - the cooking of Auguste Escoffier – Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, includes dates next to each item. – Montreal’s Joe Beef restaurant devotes an entire chapter to the vanished cuisine of North America’s railway dining cars • “Rotten” doesn’t have to be a dirty word – Long welcomed in cheese, pickles, cured meats and sauces – Chefs are perfecting house-fermented foods like soy, miso paste and kimchi – David Chang (Momofuku chain) gave a lecture about edible bacteria at Harvard last month • Elite chefs and producers learn to share – Harvard lectures – Omnivore Food Festival – Gastronomica
  • 24. 2011/2012 Culinary Trends • Vegetables are the new meat – Greater emphasis on respecting the integrity and status of vegetables • The word “restaurant” is over – Pop-ups (Thomas Keller – Harrods, Pierre Koffmann - Selfridges) – Food trucks (Jun Tanaka – Street Kitchen) – Supper clubs (Nuno Mendes – The Loft, Stuart Langley - Disappearing Dining Club • “Local” doesn’t just mean local any more – Noma • Wine is so overrated – Beer & cocktail pairings
  • 25. Useful Resources • kitchen-theory.com • blog.khymos.org • foodpairing.be • understandingfoodadditives.org • modernistcuisine.com • exploratorium.edu • flavornet.org • umamiinfo.com

Notas do Editor

  1. It is a sad reflection that while we can and do measure the temperature in the atmosphere of Venus, we do not know what goes on inside our soufflés," he famously said
  2. The focus of the workshops was on traditional kitchen preparations, how they work and how an understanding of the basic physics and chemistry involved might improve the preparation I think that what we have here is a marketing operation and the public should not be tricked into believing that molecular cuisine is a cooking style.
  3. That trip marked our outlook on cooking. FromGagnaire we learnt something that may be summed up thus: “Everything is possible”. With Bras we discovered sensitivity, the world of nature, respect for the pronounced flavour of each product, to a level that we had never experienced up to then1987, Jacques Maximinthe Côte d’Azur, ‘creativity means not copying’
  4. a compound is a compound, and it can be either extracted from plant or animal tissues, or synthetized, but it become chemical only if it is studied or used by a chemist, i.e. a scientist, for scientific purpose. For example, water is not a « chemical », except when it is studied in a chemistry lab, not when it is drunk
  5. Mr. Myhrvold suggests that a kitchen blender is highly effective at aerating wine.  He says "…it almost invariably improves red wines—particularly younger ones, but even a 1982 Château Margaux"
  6. our brains, "taste" is actually a fusion of a food's taste, smell and touch into a single sensation. This combination of qualities takes place because during chewing or sipping, all sensory information originates from a common location.
  7. Acquiring information related to scent through the back of the mouth is called retronasal olfaction—via the nostrils it is called orthonasal olfaction. Both methods influence flavor;
  8. That backs another idea common in food science: the flavour principle. This is the notion that the difference between regional cuisines can be reduced to just a few ingredients. For example, paprika, onion and lard is a pretty good signature of Hungarian cuisine.Ahn and co's study suggest that dairy products, wheat and eggs define North American cuisine while East Asian food is dominated by plant derivatives such as soy sauce, sesame oil, rice and ginger.
  9. “Meat Fruit,” developed with the help of a royal culinary historian, finds its roots in 1500.