Lecture 35: Science of New Dishes and New Organisms
Science of New Dishes and New Organisms .................................
Lecture 35
I
n the 20th century, new forms of energy and food science completely
transformed the food most people ate on a daily basis, but it was not
until the latter part of the century that science was systematically applied
to gastronomy at the level of fi ne dining. Many of the techniques were
borrowed from the food industry and were actually quite common. They had
not, however, been applied to creating new foods that no one had ever seen
before. This lecture focuses on the scientifi c side of our food supply—not
only genetically modifi ed food, but also other technologies, including those
that have infl uenced gastronomy.
Molecular Gastronomy and Scientifi cally Engineered Food
In the beginning of the 20th century, attempts to apply science to
fi ne dining were largely pathetic. The whole idea was to embrace
the era of the machine, speed, and violence, but in the end, most
attempts to do this were laughably silly. It was not until toward the
end of the century that science was successfully applied to creating
new and actually edible foods at the level of fi ne dining.
Ordinary food has been scientifi cally engineered for the past
century. Manufacturers are not required to label foods that are
genetically modifi ed, so we are largely unaware of the extent to
which our food supply has been changed. The U.S. government has
decided that it would be better for us not to know, lest out of fear we
reject these foods, as has happened in Europe.
Genetically modifi ed food is not in and of itself anything new.
Humans have been altering the genes of plants through artifi cial
selection for the past 10,000 years. Instead of nature calling the
shots—through natural selection or sexual selection, allowing
those adaptations that are best suited for a given environment to
survive—we have been selecting them to get what we want.