In the Nov. 24 issue of Science there's a small article on Hervé This. Not too much new but interesting nevertheless.
ScienceMag wrote:HERVÉ THIS PROFILE:
The Joy of Evidence-Based Cooking
Martin Enserink
Molecular gastronomist Hervé This is trying to demystify cooking in a country whose cuisine is famous worldwide
PARIS--Is it true that pears turn red in covered copper pans lined with tin? Do you always have to whip cream in the same direction? Does the skin of suckling pigs really get more crackling when the head is cut immediately after roasting? What of the old French wisdom that mayonnaise, a delicate emulsion of oil and water, will fail when prepared by menstruating women?
Such are the questions that occupy the mind of French celebrity scientist Hervé This, who studies the science of cooking. This (pronounced "Teess"), who has dual appointments at the National Institute for Agronomic Research (INRA) and the Collège de France, wants to know whether common rules of cooking are science-based or just bogus. (The answers to the above questions, in case you are wondering, are no, no, yes, and no, respectively.)
This is the most prominent spokesperson of a small but growing research field known as "molecular gastronomy," or, as famed food science writer Harold McGee from Palo Alto, California, puts it, "the science of making delicious things." He studies what happens in pots, pans, and ovens to create that divine flavor and texture. And in the process, he's trying to give cooking a more solid scientific basis, which means getting rid of some age-old wisdoms.
ScienceMag wrote:In another attempt to bring rigor to the messy process of cooking, This has developed a system for "classification of dispersed systems," which describes each dish as a formula, based on the state of its ingredients (gas, liquid, or solid) and the preparation process. (In this system, puff pastry becomes ((S1/S2)0.5BETA ((W/O)/S3)0.5)BETA729.) The formulas--a bit like those Lavoisier developed to describe chemical reactions--can be used not only to classify dishes, This says, but to invent new ones as well. "He's the first one ever to try that, and it's something to be proud of," says Van der Linden.
Although he says he's more interested in research than in cooking, This does have close ties with a three-star chef, Pierre Gagnaire of the eponymous restaurant in Paris. Every month, This sends him an idea from the lab--for instance, an egg cooked at 65°C, which is far less rubbery than those cooked at 100°--which Gagnaire then turns into a recipe. (The entire collection is available on Gagnaire's Web site.)
full article here (may require subscription)
The most interesting was the information about Gagnaire's website (French):
http://www.pierre-gagnaire.com/index-fr.htm
http://www.pierre-gagnaire.com/francais/cdthis.htm
the second link is the one with This (he's the one on the right in the pics)
If you want to read the full article and can't access it, pm me