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How to Read a French Fry: And Other Stories of Intriguing Kitchen Science

How to Read a French Fry: And Other Stories of Intriguing Kitchen Science

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: "Fictional stories of scientific falshoods"...
Review: If you are interested in learning about the *actual* science of food, but don't want to learn any science, at least read a book by someone who *did* learn it. There is so much grossly erroneous information in this book that he discredits himself entirely. "Oil is more dense than water-- and that's why it can be heated to higher temperatures than 212". As a chemist and formulator I can assure you that nearly all oil is lighter than water, and even if it weren't that's *not* the reason it has a higher boiling point. Ever make oil & vinegar salad dressing? Ever seen crude oil on the ocean? How about the funk on top of old greasy dish water? Folks, oil floats on water... and the earth is not flat. Either this guy is a complete moron, or he is a very clever con artist. Either way, save your money... and buy that blind Amish author's book "Semiconductor Microengineering for Dummies" instead. It's better researched.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: "Fictional stories of scientific falshoods"...
Review: If you are interested in learning about the *actual* science of food, but don't want to learn any science, at least read a book by someone who *did* learn it. There is so much grossly erroneous information in this book that he discredits himself entirely. "Oil is more dense than water-- and that's why it can be heated to higher temperatures than 212". As a chemist and formulator I can assure you that nearly all oil is lighter than water, and even if it weren't that's *not* the reason it has a higher boiling point. Ever make oil & vinegar salad dressing? Ever seen crude oil on the ocean? How about the funk on top of old greasy dish water? Folks, oil floats on water... and the earth is not flat. Either this guy is a complete moron, or he is a very clever con artist. Either way, save your money... and buy that blind Amish author's book "Semiconductor Microengineering for Dummies" instead. It's better researched.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Clever but not accurate
Review: If you are looking for a cutesy book with no actual food science merit, then buy this arrogant book!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: How to read a subtitle.
Review: If you buy this item based on its subtitle, don't bother. I bought this for the library and the faculty hoping that it would help them prepare interesting labs (and perhaps tasty ones). There isn't much in the way of science. I recall having tripped over books in the past which actually do discuss the science of food and cooking. This one falls short. The fact there is no bibliography doesn't help me recall those titles which really did set out to discuss the science of food.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Science Lite
Review: If you want a book on the science of cooking done right, read Harold McGee's fine "On Food and Cooking." If you want the Reader's Digest/fortune cookie version, try Mr. Parsons, a man who came up with a clever title, then couldn't find a book to go with it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'll Read It, But I Won't Eat It
Review: It's telling that Russ Parsons titles his book with the one food that's on virtually no one's diet: The French Fry. Now that the forbidden fruit has got my attention, I am deep frying myself in this compendium. I read all the food science books and get something from each one, but I like Parsons' way of putting things. For example, he entitles a chapter "fat, flour, and fear," the fear relating to failure or perhaps a piecrust. This is smart, because this kind of thing happens. Food science helps, with a good dose of hands-on experience. As Parsons tells us: "The only way to learn how to make a good piecrust is to make enough bad ones..." Of course, we knew that already, but it helps seeing it repeated in a science context. Applying the science is the key.

Food writer Elliot Essman's other reviews and food articles are available at www.stylegourmet.com

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Science in explained in Layman/woman Terms
Review: Mr. Parsons writes an excellent book for those who want to know why rather than "just do it". For most cooks, it's show me the recipe. For Mr. Parsons it's more of a lets look at the science behind what you're trying to do. EXCELLENT BOOK if you want to know WHY. In addition, he does give excellent recipies as a "learning experience" of his teachings. I totally recommend this book to the "scientists of cooking" and still recommend it to cooks in general.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A recipe collection with stories of kitchen science applied
Review: Russ Parson's How To Read A French Fry blends a recipe collection with stories of kitchen science applied, making for an unusual title which straddles the worlds of science and cookery. From the thickening abilities of starch and how it works to assessing temperatures and 'doneness', this packs a traditional cookbook with plenty of insights on how the processes work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the Best Popular Books on Food Science
Review: Russ Parsons is a `Los Angeles Times' culinary columnist originally hired by Ruth Reichl who, with Shirley Corriher (`Cookwise'), Alton Brown (TV's `Good Eats'), and Robert Volker (`What Einstein Told His Cook') work at explaining cooking to us all. I have not read Corriher's very highly regarded book, but I would give Parsons the highest regard when compared to Brown and Volker when looking at what they do in common. To anticipate any thoughts that I am overlooking Harold McGee, I believe McGee's book `On Food and Cooking' is literally in a class of its own, from which all of these other authors have probably borrowed.

While Brown and Volker give scientific explanations of culinary phenomena, with Brown's chapters in `I'm Only Here for the Food' being somewhat deeper than Volker's question and answer format, Parsons is looking at culinary facts from a much broader point of view. It is as if all three understand food and all three have good scientific explanations for food facts, but only Parsons understands SCIENCE. Alton Brown gives an excellent metaphor for science in describing what he does as drawing a roadmap of a neighborhood (of custards, for example) rather than simply giving step by step instructions as one would when writing out the method for a recipe. Brown, however, seems constantly constrained by the limits of a 30-minute `Good Eats' episode or of a book chapter on braising.

Parsons addresses the whole field of food science from the other direction. He doesn't talk about what causes meat to brown (and why this tastes so good) or how simmering in water creates gelatin in stocks, or how the barbecue method is so good at producing tender meat from tough primals. Instead, he talks about MEAT, its composition, and how it reacts, in general, to heat, and what the variations are from chicken to pork to veal to beef to lamb. From these, we can see the similarities between, for example, barbecue and braising. This is what science is all about. Explaining individual facts without an underlying theory becomes nothing more than description. Alton Brown uses the theory to explain the facts. Russ Parsons talks about the theory, with facts as examples of how the theory works.

What so frustrates me about the clarity with which Parsons writes is that in spite of this, TV food show hosts continue to perpetuate myths about cooking like the one about searing meat is done to `seal in the juices'. Both Parsons and McGee have refuted this statement, yet some Food Network hosts make that statement over and over. I think all people who make their living by writing or speaking about food should be required to take a good chemistry course, followed by a food science course before they are let loose with word processor or microphone. But I digress.

Parsons' book is composed of six essays, each on some basic aspect of food composition or behavior. These chapters are:

How to read a French fry: Frying and the chemical and physical properties of frying oils.
The second life of plants: Changes to fruits and vegetables after harvest and cooking.
Miracle in a shell: Eggs and their amazing emulsifying properties.
From a pebble to a pillow: Starches from rice, beans, flour, potatoes and their ability to thicken.
Meat and heat: The Maillard principle, collagen, fats, and what it is that gives meat its flavor.
Fat, flour, and fear: Pie crusts, butter or lard, and gluten formation.

Each essay is longer or much longer than a typical newspaper column. It is also a level of writing that rarely sees the food pages of my local newspaper. I suspect most of the articles were serialized over several issues. These essays alone make the book worthwhile. Parsons goes on to give practical cooking tips. All these tips should now be fully understandable and therefore eminently easy to remember once the cook has read the essay on which they are based. A favorite for me is the recommendation to thicken sauces with flour rather than with cornstarch or arrowroot. If one is exposed to a little Chinese cooking, cornstarch acquires a great attraction and is seemingly easier to use than flour. What experienced chefs know, but never say, is that flour is a much more stable thickener and will stand up to reheating much better than other starches. For those of us who dote on `Molto Mario' and `Good Eats', many of the hints, especially for pasta, will seem obvious, but then not everyone mainlines the Food Network six hours a day.

Parsons caps each essay with a collection of recipes appropriate to the lessons in the essay. Most of the recipes are old standards that the foodies among us have seen often before, such as snickerdoodles, macaroni and cheese, pot roast, and ratatouille. This means that anyone with a cookbook collection of any size may not find very much new in these pages, except as concrete examples of the science presented in the essays. I will say the recipes I examined are highly respectable and should produce excellent results. The author does provide a complete table of all recipes by principle ingredient (fish) or course (dessert). I think this should be a feature of every cookbook. It is doubly useful when ingredient or course does not organize the book.

My only regret about this book is that it is so short and that so few people will be attracted to reading it. We need food science to replace the extensive drilling in cooking techniques that we used to get at our mothers or grandmother's side. That has disappeared, and it wasn't all that great to begin with.

With sincere apologies to Alton Brown, who gives me more laughs in one `Good Eats' episode than Parsons has in this whole book, I highly recommend this to anyone and everyone who likes to read about food.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: great jumping off point
Review: This book has helped me be more imaginative in inventing my own recipes. It has also helped me understand why I failed in other recipes. THe recipes included in the book are not very interesting however.


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