Interesting that applied chemistry would appeal, as a topic, to foodies, but I also found "Why the Fries Taste So Good" to be among the more fascinating chapters in
Fast Food Nation. These posts make me wonder: does anyone remember when the Museum of Science and Industry used to feature Swift's "Food for Life" exhibit? (No doubt I'm showing my age here; this was back when the museum was free, too.) They used to have a test kitchen there, and would ask lucky museum patrons to come into the kitchen to sample and assess some product Swift was considering putting on the market. My mother got asked once to give her opinion of some canned barbeque pork product ; on the card she handed in to the white-jacketed Swift kitchen technicians she proclaimed it "God awful." I'm not sure if that made it onto the supermarket shelves or not. They used to have the hatching chicks there, too, and the "kitchen of the future," which, if I recall correctly, had a
dishwasher! And then there was the really big Maytag washer somewhere in that vicinity. I'm totally digressing here, but there's quite a social history to be written of the S&I Museum, one that would note, for one thing, how Chicago's shrinking industrial base has transformed the Museum -- no more exhibits sponsored by Swift, International Harvester, US Steel, or Standard Oil. (No more Maytag, either.)
ToniG