2. Contents
• Modern cooking tools
– Thermomix
– Paco jet
– Smoke gun
– Vacuum packer
– Water bath & immersion calculator
– Anti griddle
– Centrifuge
– Rotary evaporator
– Liquid Nitrogen
– Transglutaminase
• Hydrocolloids
– Important characteristics of Gels
– Considerations when using Hydrocolloids
– Hydrocolloid properties
3. New Kitchen Equipment
• Thermomix
• Pacojet
– Frozen cocktails
– Soups, pâtés, terrines, quenelles
– Sorbets and ice creams
– Vegetable, herb and spice concentrates
– Mousses
4. New Kitchen Equipment
• Smoke gun
– Natural cool smoke instantly
– Can smoke butter, oysters,
cocktails, salads, chocolate,
meringue, etc.
– Creates flavors with wood chips,
teas, spices, and dried flowers.
5. New Kitchen Equipment
• Vaccum packing
– Stops oxidization
– Preserves shelf life
– Good for storage
• Sous vide cooking
– Controlled temperature
– Uniform cooking for long periods
– Cooking juices are retained
– Easy to use in the kitchen
– Minimal loss of moisture and weight
– Preservation of flavour/aroma as water soluble substances – especially
aromatics – are not lost
– Flavours are enhanced, colours
– Nutrients are preserved as water-soluble minerals are not leached into
cooking water, as cooking in a vacuum bag eliminates this
– Research has shown that sous vide gives the highest retention of vitamins vs.
steaming and boiling
– Little additional fat is required during cooking
– Consistent results every time a dish is cooked
6. New Kitchen Equipment
• The Anti-Griddle
– Quickly freezes sauces and purees
– Creates solid or semi-frozen creations with stable,
crunchy surfaces and cool, creamy centers
– Reaches minus 34°C in 5 to 10 mintues
– Has been used to make crème brûlée lollipops and
frozen hot chocolate
7. New Kitchen Equipment
• Centrifuge
– A centrifuge is a device that spins at high speed to
separate products into parts based on density
– Cooking items have different densities
– Clarify juice by separating the pulp and the liquid,
or to remove the fat from an emulsion and clarify
8. New Kitchen Equipment
• Rotary Evaporator
– Combines evaporation under vacuum and condensation
– Liquids are evaporated under vacuum, lowers their boiling point
– Rotation of the evaporating flask, immersed in a heated water
bath, increases the surface area of the product, greatly speeding
distillation
– Enables evaporation at as low as 95°F/35°C
– Evaporation, distillation, concentration of flavors, and purification
of liquids
– Concentrates non-volatile components in a mixture
– Extracts the volatile aroma and flavor molecules from mixtures
– Obtains essential oils that can be used to infuse or intensify flavor
9. Liquid Nitrogen
• Liquid Nitrogen
– Instant freezing
– Reduces ice crystal formation
– Negative 196 degrees Celsius
– Despite its coldness, it has only 15% more cooling power than the
same amount of ice at 0 Celsius, as its not as dense
• Uses:
– Making ice cream in a kitchen aid
– Chill liquids without diluting them
– Freeze the unfreezable (e.g. alcohol, olive oil)
– Chilling glasses
– Blow smoke
– ‘Cryo-poachinh’
– Powders, crystals and frozen drops
10. Transglutaminase
• Naturally occurring enzyme in plants, animals, and bacteria
• Meat glue is an enzyme that acts on the amino acids causing
bonds to form that helps the meat stick together
– Make uniform portions that cook evenly, look good, and reduce waste
– Bind meat mixtures like sausages without casings
– Make novel meat combinations like lamb and scallops
– Produce special effects like meat noodles, meat and vegetable pasta
How to test meat glue: a) Rub a lot of meat glue into a piece of raw chicken; b) if it just
smells like chicken your glue is no good; c) If it smells like wet dog you're good to go!
11. Hydrocolloids
• Hydrocolloids are classified as either thickening
or gelling agents
• Hydrocolloids are ingredients that control water
in a recipe
• Many hydrocolloids are derived from natural
sources, such as seaweed, seeds, roots, tree sap,
fruit peels, etc
• Some modern but still all-natural hydrocolloids
produced by bacteria
12. Important Characteristics of Gels
• Thermo-reversible/Irreversible: Thermo-reversible gels melt
when heated to a high enough temperature. Thermo-
irreversible gels will not melt when heated.
• Tendency for Syneresis: Syneresis occurs when liquid weeps
out of a gel over time, as happens in custards.
• Freeze-thaw stability: Gels that may be frozen and thawed
repeatedly are called freeze-thaw stable
13. Important Characteristics of Gels
• Clarity: The addition of some hydrocolloids yield gels that
are more transparent than others
• Flavor release: describes how well a gel expresses the
flavorings with which it has been made. Flavor release is
determined by many gel texture properties
• Shear reversibility: Shear is a force in which parallel
objects move in opposite directions in a “sliding” motion
14. Important Characteristics of Gels
– Shear thinning: Most hydrocolloids tend to get thinner as they are
sheared
– Yield point: Some hydrocolloids act like a gel when standing still and
liquefy instantly under shear
– Fluid gels: Hydrocolloids can also form fluid gels. Fluid gels have the
properties of both a fluid and a gel
15. Considerations when using
Hydrocolloids
• Forming Gels: It is extremely important to understand when and why a
hydrocolloid gels since this behavior typically determines which
hydrocolloid is appropriate to use
• Heating and Cooling: Many hydrocolloids gel when cooled. Sometimes
these gels can be melted again and sometimes they cannot
• Calcium and Potassium: Some hydrocolloids form gels in the presence of
positively charged ions, mainly calcium and potassium
• Synergy, 1+1=3: Hydrocolloids do not act like most ingredients. In general,
do not expect to be able to mix two hydrocolloids without changing their
properties
• Hydration: For a hydrocolloid to work properly, it must be hydrated and
dissolved in solution
Goulash separated into 8 layers by density, water, oil, tomato paste, peppercorns etc..By spinning liquids in a centrifuge u get a pseudo gravitational effect (which can be around 40,000 times that of normal gravity) Top layer – pea brothBottom layer – peasaw dust, starch and other solids, little flavourMiddle layer – pea butter, pectin etc (not fat otherwise it would be on top)
Chemistry students are familiar with the rotary evaporator — a piece of lab equipment that removes solvents from a mixture of compounds through evaporation and condensation. The rotovap is designed for low-temperature distilling, so ingredients don’t have to be excessively heated during the process.Which is useful for cooking purposes. Rotovap distillation can separate food compounds from one another without altering them, unlike standard distillation. rotary evaporators can separate desirable from undesirable flavors—drawing off the rich aromatics of a chili pepper, for instance, while leaving behind capsaicin, which lends peppers their heat, In the kitchen, the device has been used to concentrate flavors and extract aromas by separating different flavor molecules. For instance, you can get the purest and freshest flavor from an orange by removing the water from the fruit.
When a hydrocolloid is dissolved in water, the water gathers around and is attracted to the sugar units, forming a layer of water with restricted movement. It is this ability to organize and control water that gives hydrocolloids their ability to thicken and gel
Agar is prone to syneresis; water can be expelled merely by pressing on it. Some gels only experience syneresis after long periods of time. Many gels that are ruined by freezing (see freeze-thaw stability, below) tend to weep when thawed. Within a given hydrocolloid system, harder gels tend to weep more than softer ones.Many gels begin to degrade after freezing; only one freeze-thaw cycle is advised. When an unstable gel is frozen and later thawed, its texture and structural may be compromised by the physical changes. To offset this effect and promote freeze-thaw stability, a second thickening hydrocolloid may be added to the gel system.Flavor release is determined by many gel texture properties. Gelatin, for example, is considered to have excellent flavor release mainly because it melts in the mouth, whereas alginate is said to have poor flavor release because it tends to lock up flavors.
Stirring produces a shear, as does blending. Very fast blenders are called high-shear blenders. A shear-reversible gel will reform after it has been broken by a shear force. Most gels are not shear reversible.
Agar fluid gels can look like hair gel on the plate but feel like a smooth, creamy sauce in the mouth. Gellan can make a fluid gel that diners will experience like a soup but that will suspend large particles as if it were solid.