Read Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food Online
Authors: Jeff Potter
Tags: #COOKING / Methods / General
If you are lucky enough to have access to an olive tree during the fall, when the unripe fruit is available, try your hand at making green olives.
Unlike the mature black fruit of the olive tree, olives in their green form can be soaked in lye (sodium hydroxide, a.k.a. caustic soda) to remove the bitter compound oleuropein that is present in the unripe flesh.
Obtaining food-grade sodium hydroxide might require some searching online;
http://www.lyedepot.com
carries food-grade micro beads. Do not use industrial products such as Drano, because they contain other chemicals! Also, because lye is extremely corrosive, take great care not to come into direct contact with it. Use rubber gloves and eye protection, and consider finding an outdoor space that is more forgiving of accidental spills than your kitchen.
In a large plastic bucket or glass jar, place:
Transfer the water to a second plastic bucket or glass jar, and measure how much water you used. (Adding it to the first container was just to determine the amount needed.) Add to the water:
Stir carefully to combine, and gently pour over olives into the first container. Soak for one day.
After a day, discard the lye/water solution and refresh with a new batch of water and lye. Soak for an additional day.
After the second day, take an olive out and cut into it, exposing the pit. If there is any whiteness near the center, discard the lye/water solution again and refresh with a new batch. Repeat until the entire olive flesh is a consistent color.
Once the olives are cured to the center, drain the liquid and soak in fresh water. A day later, replace the fresh water with salt water, using 1 tablespoon of salt per quart. Replace the salt water daily for three to five days. Transfer to a jar, fill with salt water, and store in the fridge.
Notes
A number of organic compounds that provide aromas in food are readily dissolved in ethanol but not in water. You will invariably encounter dishes where alcohol is used for its chemical properties, either as a medium to carry flavors or as a tool for making flavors in the food available in sufficient quantity for your olfactory system to notice.
Ethanol can react with carboxylic acids in acid-catalyzed conditions, forming compounds that then react with more ethanol to generate water and the ester compounds that help carry aromas up into the nasal cavity.
Alcohol is often added to sauces or stews to aid in releasing aromatic compounds “locked up” in the ingredients. Try adding red wine to a tomato sauce or dribbling a bit of Pernod (anise liqueur) on top of a piece of pan-seared cod served with roasted fennel and rice.
You can also make your own flavor-infused vodkas by adding diced fruit, berries, herbs, or other spices to straight vodka. And since your concoction doesn’t have to be shelf-stable like commercial varieties, you can generate better-tasting infusions. Don’t limit yourself to just vodkas, either; try adding mint and a small quantity of sugar syrup to bourbon whiskey and storing it in the freezer.
No, not entirely. Even though the boiling point of pure ethanol (C
2
H
5
OH) is lower than that of water at atmospheric pressure (173°F / 78°C), the intermolecular bonding between ethanol and other compounds in the food is strong enough that its boiling point varies based on the concentration of ethanol in the food and how the other chemicals in the food hold on to it.
The table to the right shows the percentage of alcohol remaining after various cooking methods according to a paper published by researchers at the University of Idaho.
Cooking method | % remaining |
---|---|
Alcohol added to boiling liquid and removed from heat | 85% |
Alcohol flamed | 75% |
No heat, stored overnight | 70% |
Baked, 25 minutes, alcohol not stirred into mixture | 45% |
Baked/simmered, alcohol stirred into mixture: | |
...for 15 minutes | 40% |
...for 30 minutes | 35% |
...for 1 hour | 25% |
...for 2 hours | 10% |
The term “fat washing” comes from the process of using fat to “wash out” undesirable molecules, but it is more useful in the home kitchen (and in molecular mixology) as a way of infusing oil-soluble compounds into alcohol. If you use a non-neutral flavored fat — a fat that has other molecules mixed in — some of the flavorful molecules will bind with the alcohol molecules (it is a solvent, after all) and remain behind in the drink.
Why do this? Because you can create infused alcohols with flavors that might not come out in traditional infusing. The flavors can either be native to the fat (butter, bacon) or fat-soluble compounds bloomed in the fat before fat washing.
Create an infusion of 3–5% fat and 95–97% alcohol. Try 2 teaspoons (10g) of melted butter with 1 cup (200g) of rum or 2 teaspoons (10g) of bacon fat (filtered!) with 1 cup (200g) of bourbon. Let rest at room temperature for 12+ hours. Longer times and higher temperatures will yield a stronger infusion, so you’ll want to experiment.
Try using an immersion blender to kick-start the infusion.
After infusing, place infusion in freezer until fats have solidified, and then filter through a coffee filter or other ~20-micron filter (see the filtration section in
Filtration
in
Chapter 7
).
Unfiltered.
100 micron filter.
~10–20 micron filter.
Notes
In a small glass jar with a tight-fitting lid, put:
Screw lid on jar or place plastic wrap over top and store in a cool, dark place (e.g., pantry) for at least a few days. Give the extract at least several weeks to steep.
Notes
This is a simple cocktail and a darn good one. And having a simple, darn-good cocktail in your repertoire can be handy. It only takes knowing one good drink to impress that romantic potential.
Put two or three sage leaves (fresh!) in a shaker and muddle with the back side of a spoon. Add 1 part gin and 1 part pink grapefruit juice — say, 2 oz (50 ml) of each — and add several ice cubes. Shake vigorously. Strain into a martini glass.
Note
Alcohol isn’t the only solvent in the kitchen. The same chemical interactions that give alcohol its magic apply to oil and water, which is why recipes call for steps such as toasting caraway seeds in oil: the oil captures the molecules responsible for the characteristic nutty flavors developed and released by heating the seeds.
But
how
does a solvent work? What happens when one molecule bumps into another molecule? Will they form a bond (called an
intermolecular bond
) or repel each other? It depends on a number of forces that stem from differences in the electrical charges and charge distributions of the two molecules.
Of the four types of bonds defined in chemistry, two are of culinary interest: polar and nonpolar.
A molecule that has an uneven electrical field around it or that has an uneven arrangement of electrons is
polar
. The simplest arrangement, where two sides of a molecule have opposite electrical charges, is called a
dipole
. Water is polar because the two hydrogen atoms attach themselves to the oxygen atom such that the molecule as a whole has a negatively charged side. When two polar molecules bump into each other, a strong bond forms between the first molecule’s positive side and the second molecule’s negative side, just like when two magnets are lined up. On the atomic level, the side of the first molecule that has a negative charge is balancing out the side of the second molecule that has a positive charge.
A water molecule is polar because the electrostatic field around the molecule is asymmetric, due to the oxygen atom being more electronegative than the hydrogen atoms and the resulting differences in how the two hydrogen atoms share their electrons with the oxygen atom. (Electron sharing is another type of bond, a covalent bond.)
A molecule that has a spherically symmetric electrostatic field — that is, there is no dipole, and the molecule doesn’t have a “side” that has a different electrical charge — is
nonpolar
. Oil is nonpolar because of the shape in which the carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms arrange themselves.
In most cases, when a polar molecule bumps into a nonpolar molecule, the polar molecule is unlikely to find an electron to balance out its electrical field. It’s a bit like trying to stick a magnet to a piece of wood: the magnet and wood aren’t actively repelled by each other, but they’re also not actually attracted. It’s the same for polar-nonpolar interaction: the molecules might bounce into each other, but they won’t stick and will end up drifting off and continuing to bounce around into other molecules.
This is why oil and water do not mix. The water molecules are polar and form strong intermolecular bonds with other polar molecules, which are able to balance out their electrical charges. At an atomic level, the oil doesn’t provide a sufficiently strong bonding opportunity for the negatively charged side of the water molecule.
Water and sugar (sucrose), however, get along fine. Sucrose is also polar, so the electrical fields of the two molecules are able to line up to some degree. The strength of the intermolecular bond depends on how well the two different compounds line up, which is why some things dissolve together well while others only dissolve together to a certain point.