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Full Description
Food Chemistry in Small Bites takes readers on an up-close scientific journey through the transformation of food when meals are prepared. Organized in bite-size, digestible units, this innovative text introduces students to food's molecular makeup as well as the perception of food by the five senses. Using familiar foods as examples, it explores what happens to ingredients when heated, cooled, or treated and also considers what happens when materials that don't naturally mix are forced to do so.
With informative, full-color renderings and a hands-on lab section, the book encourages students to think like scientists while preparing delicious dishes. Readers will formulate hypotheses as to why certain foods taste hot despite being at room temperature, why milk separates into curds and whey when lemon is added, and other ordinary but chemically complex phenomena. This book also importantly challenges readers to think critically about the future of food in the face of a warming planet.
Contents
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Boxes
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Informing
1. Why Do We Eat?
2. Making Sense of Our Senses
Part II. Transforming
3. Cooking with Fire and Ice
4. Transforming Food Using pH, Pressure, and Microbes
5. Manipulating Texture
Part III. Reforming
6. The Future of Food
Part IV. Performing
7. The Culinary Laboratory
Notes
Bibliography
Illustration Credits
Index



