Nathan Myhrvold, former chief technology officer at Microsoft, applied his intellect, curiosity, deep passion for cooking and considerably deep pockets to produce the definitive work on the new cooking, "Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking." He assembled a large team of professionals and contributors in creating the $625, five-volume tome, which includes 381 "example recipes," 180 "parametric recipes" (essentially graphs that each have about 10 recipes included) and 68 original "plated dish" entries.
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Ed Levine's blog wrote:Myhrvold says he is often criticized for his predilection for cooking with chemicals. His response: "I tell them chemicals are made with elements, too, aren't they?"
Achatz was asked about possible applications for the home cook of what he does. He said with a wry smile, "Aren't thermal circulators the new microwave? I have always thought so."
I asked them about where delicious intersects with technology. Achatz's response: "I tend to evaluate rather than enjoy." Fascinating response, isn't it?
Myhrvold said delicious is often not what he's going for. He's trying to provoke people to think about and to taste food in different way. The element of surprise kept coming up over and over again.
Cathy2 wrote:An mp3 of Grant Achatz and Nathan Myhrvold talk at the New York Public Library
Here's the recipe for the most astonishing cookbook of our time: Take one multimillionaire computer genius, a team of 36 researchers, chefs and editors and a laboratory specially built for cooking experiments. After nearly four years of obsessive research, assemble 2,400 pages of results into a 47-pound, six-volume collection that costs $625 and requires four pounds of ink to print.
To call inventor Nathan Myhrvold's "Modernist Cuisine: The Art & Science of Cooking," on sale next month, a "cookbook" is akin to calling James Joyce's "Ulysses" "a story." The book is a large-scale investigation into the math, science and physics behind cooking tasks from making juicy and crisp beer-can chicken to coating a foie-gras bonbon in sour cherry gel. There is precedent in this genre—science writer Harold McGee has published popular books explaining kitchen science, and chefs Thomas Keller and Ferran Adrià have written about sous vide and other techniques of avant-garde gastronomy—but nothing reaches the scope and magnitude of Mr. Myhrvold's book. While it will likely appeal to professional chefs, within its pages are insights that even the humblest home cooks can use to improve their meals. The book puts traditional cooking wisdom under scientific scrutiny, destroying old assumptions and creating new cooking approaches.
gdenby wrote:What little dabbling I've done w. sous vide has resulted in some fine food. I suspect the info (which has also been stated elsewhere) about safe meat cooking temperatures will change the ways lots of people cook. It would be great if the demand for temperature controllers is large enough to bring the cost down below $100.
Bill/SFNM wrote:toria wrote:I also heard you can approximate Sous vide cooking at home with a rice cooker put on the "warm" cycle. I saw a recipe once calling for cooking pot roast overnight at the warm temperature. Was afraid to try it though.
This is my SV rig. I also use a $22 aquarium water circulator. It is rated for 95F, but I haven't had any problems (yet) at 130F-140F.
Chris Amirault wrote:no one has received a book that they've ordered yet. A few volunteers got online access through this week, and I got an advanced loaner copy. Delivery still set for early March, I believe.
JoelF wrote:As food-geeky as I am (still working on constructing my own immersion circulator, have made a couple dishes from the "Alinea" cookbook, alginate stocked in my pantry), I don't see buying a $600 cookbook, even discounted to $470-sumthin. The spiral notebook of charts and tables, that I'd buy for $35. Maybe MrsF will get me a really nice xmas gift this year.
Cathy2 wrote:In the link mp3, Achatz and Myhrvold both commented on their interactions on e-Gullet. I believe the topic was sous-vide in the very early phases. There was an e-Gullet poster who was emulating their experiments and taking them even further. When Myhrvold (or was it Achatz) had a speaking engagement near where this poster lived, he proposed they meet. They were flabbergasted to learn this poster was a junior at Duke University. He used sous-vide because the food was encased in plastic, there were no detectable cooking odors, thus allowing him to cook in his dorm room without notice.
Cathy2 wrote:To err is human.
Cathy2 wrote:Modernist Cuising grilling tips.