Columbia University Press
Mouthfeel
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About this book
Author / Editor information
Klavs Styrbæk is an award-winning chef who, with his wife, runs the gastronomical innovation project STYRBÃKS, incorporating an experimental restaurant and a chefs' school. With Ole G. Mouritsen, he is the author of Umami: Unlocking the Secrets of the Fifth Taste (Columbia, 2015).
Reviews
Sharon Moalem, author of Inheritance: How Our Genes Change Our Lives and Our Lives Change Our Genes:
A dazzling tour-de-force through the fascinating science of a little appreciated but immensely important aspect of the human gustatory experience. Mouritsen and Styrbæk have left no stone unturned in their quest to illuminate and turn our daily experience of eating into a riveting journey through human history. Mouthfeel is sure to become a classic and much beloved resource on this subject.
Harold McGee, author of On Food and Cooking: The Science and the Lore of the Kitchen:
Mouthfeel is an intriguing exploration of that vital yet often overlooked aspect of the eating experience, and a practical guide to ingredient textures and the cooking methods that modify them.
Charles Spence, coauthor of The Perfect Meal: The Multisensory Science of Food and Dining:
Mouthfeel is a hugely important, if little studied area of flavor perception, yet the texture of food is a crucial determinant of what we like to eat. In this timely volume biophysicist, Ole Mouritsen, and chef, Klavs Styrbæk, provide a great introduction to the confusing science of the senses as applied to tasting and flavor. They also provide a number of carefully considered recipes and experiments to try at home that illustrate the key points they raise. Mouthfeel convincingly shows readers just what they have been missing by not paying more attention to the feeling of food and drink in the mouth.
Gordon M. Shepherd, author of Neurogastronomy and Neuroenology:
Adding to their groundbreaking books on the wonders of seaweed and the mysteries of umami, Ole Mouritsen and Klavs Styrbæk provide the first in-depth exploration of mouthfeel: the amazing variety of ways that the physical properties of food enrich our sense of taste. Far beyond just hot or cold and rough or smooth, mouthfeel encompasses dozens of properties—from crisp to creamy, peppery to chalky, hard to chewy, sticky to silky—the list goes on. As much as taste and aroma, these properties of mouthfeel are vital to the qualities we prize in the food we eat. Written with the authoritative insights of a leading scientist, and illustrated by stunning photographs of food prepared by a master chef, Mouthfeel is an exciting tour de force.
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
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Acknowledgments
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1. The Complex Universe of Taste and Flavor
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2. What Makes Up Our Food?
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3. The Physical Properties of Food: Form, Structure, and Texture
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4. Texture and Mouthfeel
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5. Playing Around with Mouthfeel
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6. Making Further Inroads into the Universe of Texture
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7. Why Do We Like the Food That We Do?
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Epilogue: Mouthfeel and a Taste for Life
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Glossary
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Bibliography
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Illustration Credits
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Index
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