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Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food

Description:

Are you the innovative type, the cook who marches to a different drummer -- used to expressing your creativity instead of just following recipes? Are you interested in the science behind what happens to food while it's cooking? Do you want to learn what makes a recipe work so you can improvise and create your own unique dish?

More than just a cookbook, Cooking for Geeks applies your curiosity to discovery, inspiration, and invention in the kitchen. Why is medium-rare steak so popular? Why do we bake some things at 350° F/175° C and others at 375° F/190° C? And how quickly does a pizza cook if we overclock an oven to 1,000° F/540° C? Author and cooking geek Jeff Potter provides the answers and offers a unique take on recipes -- from the sweet (a "mean" chocolate chip cookie) to the savory (duck confit sugo).

This book is an excellent and intriguing resource for anyone who wants to experiment with cooking, even if you don't consider yourself a geek.

  • Initialize your kitchen and calibrate your tools
  • Learn about the important reactions in cooking, such as protein denaturation, Maillard reactions, and caramelization, and how they impact the foods we cook
  • Play with your food using hydrocolloids and sous vide cooking
  • Gain firsthand insights from interviews with researchers, food scientists, knife experts, chefs, writers, and more, including author Harold McGee, TV personality Adam Savage, chemist Herv&eacute This, and xkcd

"My own session with the book made me feel a lot more confident in my cooking."

--Monica Racic,
The New Yorker

"I LOVE this book. It's inspiring, invigorating, and damned fun to spend time inside the mind of 'big picture' cooking. I'm Hungry!"

--Adam Savage, co-host of Discovery Channel's MythBusters

"In his enchanting, funny, and informative book, Cooking for Geeks (O'Reilly), Jeff Potter tells us why things work in the kitchen and why they don't."

-- Barbara Hanson, NewYork
Daily News


Editorial Reviews

Review

One of the most useful books on understanding cooking, kind of like a rock-and-roll version of Harold McGee's "On Food and Cooking." -The Washington Post

In his enchanting, funny, and informative book, Cooking for Geeks (O'Reilly), Jeff Potter tells us why things work in the kitchen and why they don't.
-NY Daily News

Potter covers an array of topics, including "calibrating your equipment" in the kitchen, gastronomy, genetically modified foods, understanding pH levels, temperature, and the psychology of taste, while giving readers a refresher in chemistry that is both accessible and (dare I say) fun.
-The New Yorker's Book Bench

Clear, fact-packed, and engaging ... Cooking for Geeks offers an improbable victory of text over the standard food porn.
-The Atlantic

About the Author

A science and food geek, Jeff Potter has been featured on television newscasts and radio shows throughout the country, spoken at science festivals both in the United States and overseas, and is a trustee and spokesperson for Awesome Food, part of the Awesome Foundation. He studied computer science and visual art at Brown University.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Just what I wanted

B.A. · August 8, 2012

I am an amateur cook at best. I was looking for a book that would increase my knowledge about ingredientes, spices, techniques, and equipment in the kitchen. This is the book for me. I can read it for hours at a time, and will keep reading it over and over to learn all of the techniques. The best part is that it explains what is actually happening with the molecules in the food, which allows me to apply the knowledge and techniques in unorthodox ways. It is great to know things like why medium rare beef tastes best to most people, how to cook food to acceptable safety standards (I like some meat more rare than FDA recommended, nice to know options and risks.), and also great to know why some things fail in the kitchen. The only bad side of this book is the interviews. The book is probably 1/2 scientific techniques and knowledge from the author, 1/8 recipes, and the remainder 3/8 interviews. The interviews are written in question/answer format, but can be very dry as many of them do not relate directly to ingredients or techniques in the kitchen. I could read this book from front to back, except I fall asleep during the interviews. And there are so many of them. Only a few of the interviews have been useful in increasing my knowledge in the kitchen. The rest just reiliterate topics that were already presented in very long winded manner, or have nothing to do with cooking (a lot of talking about creating food blogs...I am an amateur, I will not be writing food blogs, and do not feel that they are essential to the cooking process.).Although I am not a fan of the interviews, the book contains enough useful information that it deserves at least 5 stars. Very well written and scientifically sound.

5.0 out of 5 stars The fun side of cooking

r. · December 9, 2011

I like cookbooks, not just for the recipes, but also to read. This one meets that need perfectly. It's such an interesting look at food and its preparation. I was looking for a Christmas gift for my son-in-law when I found this. He's a former IT guy and is now a nurse. He loves the creative side of cooking. One Christmas, he made bacon ice cream for all of us (not the same way that was demonatrated in the video above!). I can't wait to see his reaction to this. I have looked through the book and have just ordered a second one for my son. He was a bio-med science major in college and is now an optometrist. He, too, enjoys the creative side of cooking. I think he will also enjoy it. I am debating on getting one for my daughter and other son-in-law. They are both Hotel/Restaurant majors/grads. My daughter now teaches in the program. It's been awhile since she's taught the class on food born illnesses, but that information is in here as well. Might be a good resource for them.I admit to not having cooked any of the recipes. I've have read some interesting ones, however. I have really enjoyed the odd tips and hints (one was putting the muffin tin on the open door of the dishwasher to spray it with cooking spray). I have a feeling this will be one of those books passed around after opening on Christmas. Good thing we will have two!

4.0 out of 5 stars Formatting problems with Kindle edition fixed

C. · August 5, 2010

I downloaded the free trial (which is generous, covering the contents table, the index, the first 3 chapters, and part of the 4th chapter, out of a 7 chapter book) and decided not to buy for the reasons I describe below. This review is based on that trial version. It is possible that the problems I had would not appear in the full version.The Kindle edition is said to be optimized for the larger screen of the Kindle DX. Unfortunately, it does not seem to be decently formatted for Kindle at all. The problems I found were present in both on my Kindle DX and in Kindle for Mac.There appear to be many illustrations, but what I got in the Kindle edition was captions which either had no picture or had a picture unrelated to the caption and the surrounding text. I could match up a few of the pictures (which are mostly very small) with distant parts of the text, but many were missing altogether. I did not find a single picture that was near the right place and had a matching caption. This seems to be a beta release of the book, being sold at a premium price by Kindle standards.There are also problems with displaying tables: sometimes we get columns that each contain a fraction of a word, and sometimes the table can't be shown in full even with panning. It is possible that these result from problems with Bolo's software. Likewise, sidebars and footnotes are inherently hard to handle on any device that reformats the book on the fly to fit the screen, font size and other settings, so the relatively minor issues they cause are forgivable.The book's content is mostly good, though it is unnecessarily padded with interviews, and contains oddly interspersed recipes (probably in sidebars in the hard copy book). There is the basic advice that we'd get from any cook book, but the aim is to teach us underlying principles, such as the important bits of the chemistry of cooking, so we don't have to rely on following a recipe slavishly then wondering what went wrong if it did not work out.If you don't get or enjoy geeky jokes and references to software engineering, or if you'd rather be told what to do in detail instead of how things work in general, look elsewhere. If you are fascinated to learn which amino acids cause the umami taste, or you'd like to know how to calibrate your oven thermostat, or you get a kick out of a dangerous-looking demonstration of how to make ice cream using liquid nitrogen, then this book is a good place to go. If you care about the layout issues, I suggest checking whether they've been fixed before buying the Kindle edition.I'll revise this review if the layout problems are fixed for the Kindle. In the meantime, 4.5 for content (for its target audience) and 2 for Kindle usability, averaging to 3 stars.UPDATE April 3, 2011.==============I bought the full Kindle version right away, as I mentioned in replies to some comments. My apologies for not updating sooner: new job, state, city and house intervened.The formatting problems were less than I had feared but were still present with the full purchased version. Fortunately, O'Reilly (the publishers) are not like most others and pretty quickly produced an improved version which has few, if any, formatting issues. If only all publishers were as conscientious.Getting the most out of an e-copy of this book really needs a screen big enough to handle the layout of the original, with its tables, photographs, sketches and sidebars. I have used the Kindle version on my Kindle DX and on my iPod Touch. The Kindle does not always handle the pictures and so on well; the iPod is too small to do the book justice. This is one case where, for me, reading on the Kindle is not as satisfying as usual. The appearance on my laptop screen is much better, but that's my least-favorite way to read a book. Perhaps someone who has read it on an iPad can comment on whether that is better.But I like the book a lot more than it might appear from all these criticisms. If I had waited for the paper copy I'd have written a 4 or 5 star review at the start. I'm glad to have the book in some form, and with the improved layout the author's presentation comes across better. I'd now give 4.5 stars for the content (I like the emphasis on underlying principles but still think there's a bit of padding) and 3.5 for the pleasure and practicality of using the Kindle version. I've revised my score to 4 stars.

Estupendo libro para empezar a cocinar

J. · April 11, 2015

Pese a las múltiples referencias frikis que contiene (por ejemplo: compiladores, algoritmos...) no es un libro dedicado en exclusiva a a geeks, sino un libro para todos aquellos que a la hora de cocinar no quieran sólo saber que hacer, sino cómo hacerlo.Plagado de explicaciones, te explicara desde cómo funciona el sentido del gusto a como mejorar el entrecruzamiento del gluten para obtener bollos más esponjosos. Desde como cocinar correctamente una crepe (y sus 100 desastrosos primeros intentos), hasta el arte de desnaturalizar el colágeno con poco calor para obtener deliciosa carne de pato. No es un libro para cocinar el día a día (aunque tiene muchas recetas válidas), sino para comprender una receta cualquiera, para entender por qué las cosas se hacen como se hacen, o por qué unas recetas se hornean a 160 ºC y otras a 180 ºC.Muy recomendable si deseas saber más sobre cocina o eres una persona de mente curiosa a la que no le asusta experimentar.

Good for geeks.

A. · February 25, 2015

There is now an edition of this book in Portuguese. When I bought this one, it was not translated yet.The book presents the kitchen in a different perspective, sometimes based on chemistry reactions or physics phenomena. Explains things like how the temperature affect the food, changes driven by chemicals like salt or sugar, etc. Saying it that way, may seem that the book is too technical or monotonous, which is not true. Well written, with lots of interesting information, presents many answers for questions that a curious mind may have. A geek thing.It also contains recipes with measures expressed in both imperial and metric system, making the reading easier for non-Americans. I believe it is worth to buy.

Ottimo

D. · June 1, 2014

This book is exactly what the title says, and since I am a big geek, I loved it :-)You will get recipes, physics and chemistry and improve the way you make food.

amazing book

r. · September 29, 2013

it's cooking, kitchen tools and more explained in a way an engineer/designer would like to understand what goes on when cooking, and what goes on when things don't work as they were supposed to. It gives you an insight on why things work out in a certain way when cooking and this way helps you realize when and how to use your tools, how certain reactions cook the food and how to get the results you are aiming for. It's not a cook book although some nice recipes are included to help visualize the theory.

Toller Einstieg ins Kochen, mit technischen Details

S. · October 21, 2013

Ich habe dieses Buch für einen (englischsprachigen) Freund zum Geburtstag gekauft. Natürlich habe ich das Buch auch vorher ausgiebig studiert!Das Buch ist für Nerds konzipiert, was man aber nur an gelegentlichen Vergleichen zu Programmiersprachen oder Programmierer-Vorurteilen merkt (nur Pizza etc.). Würde nicht "Cooking for Geeks" draufstehen, könnte man es auch jedem anderen Kochanfänger schenken. Schön finde ich, dass in den ersten Kapiteln erstmal die Motivation aufgebaut wird. Immer wieder wird wiederholt, wie einfach es eigentlich geht und wie schnell, dass man eigentlich keinen Fehler machen kann, dass man ruhig Experimente wagen soll, etc.Interessant wird es dann vor allem, wenn chemische Vorgänge erklärt werden. Die "Maillard-Reaktion" z.B. war mir nicht geläufig, und ich finde es auch gut zu wissen, bei welcher Temperatur eigentlich was mit Proteinen passiert. Dabei ist das beim täglichen Kochen+Backen eigentlich ganz wichtig! Schön erklärt ist auch, was mit was ersetzt werden kann, was beim Gehen von Hefe eigentlich passiert, was der Unterschied zu Backpulver ist etc. .Am Schluss wird sogar auf Molekularküche eingegangen. Das Buch ist umfangreich und detailiert, ohne langweilig zu werden - deswegen 5 Sterne.

Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food

Product ID: U0596805888
Condition: New

4.5

AED15878

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Type: Paperback
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

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Imported From: United States

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Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food

Product ID: U0596805888
Condition: New

4.5

Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food-0
Type: Paperback

AED15878

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

Returns & Warranty policies

Imported From: United States

At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.

BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.

Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.

If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.

Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.

All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.

While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.

Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.

BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.

All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.

All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.

Description:

Are you the innovative type, the cook who marches to a different drummer -- used to expressing your creativity instead of just following recipes? Are you interested in the science behind what happens to food while it's cooking? Do you want to learn what makes a recipe work so you can improvise and create your own unique dish?

More than just a cookbook, Cooking for Geeks applies your curiosity to discovery, inspiration, and invention in the kitchen. Why is medium-rare steak so popular? Why do we bake some things at 350° F/175° C and others at 375° F/190° C? And how quickly does a pizza cook if we overclock an oven to 1,000° F/540° C? Author and cooking geek Jeff Potter provides the answers and offers a unique take on recipes -- from the sweet (a "mean" chocolate chip cookie) to the savory (duck confit sugo).

This book is an excellent and intriguing resource for anyone who wants to experiment with cooking, even if you don't consider yourself a geek.

  • Initialize your kitchen and calibrate your tools
  • Learn about the important reactions in cooking, such as protein denaturation, Maillard reactions, and caramelization, and how they impact the foods we cook
  • Play with your food using hydrocolloids and sous vide cooking
  • Gain firsthand insights from interviews with researchers, food scientists, knife experts, chefs, writers, and more, including author Harold McGee, TV personality Adam Savage, chemist Herv&eacute This, and xkcd

"My own session with the book made me feel a lot more confident in my cooking."

--Monica Racic,
The New Yorker

"I LOVE this book. It's inspiring, invigorating, and damned fun to spend time inside the mind of 'big picture' cooking. I'm Hungry!"

--Adam Savage, co-host of Discovery Channel's MythBusters

"In his enchanting, funny, and informative book, Cooking for Geeks (O'Reilly), Jeff Potter tells us why things work in the kitchen and why they don't."

-- Barbara Hanson, NewYork
Daily News


Editorial Reviews

Review

One of the most useful books on understanding cooking, kind of like a rock-and-roll version of Harold McGee's "On Food and Cooking." -The Washington Post

In his enchanting, funny, and informative book, Cooking for Geeks (O'Reilly), Jeff Potter tells us why things work in the kitchen and why they don't.
-NY Daily News

Potter covers an array of topics, including "calibrating your equipment" in the kitchen, gastronomy, genetically modified foods, understanding pH levels, temperature, and the psychology of taste, while giving readers a refresher in chemistry that is both accessible and (dare I say) fun.
-The New Yorker's Book Bench

Clear, fact-packed, and engaging ... Cooking for Geeks offers an improbable victory of text over the standard food porn.
-The Atlantic

About the Author

A science and food geek, Jeff Potter has been featured on television newscasts and radio shows throughout the country, spoken at science festivals both in the United States and overseas, and is a trustee and spokesperson for Awesome Food, part of the Awesome Foundation. He studied computer science and visual art at Brown University.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Just what I wanted

B.A. · August 8, 2012

I am an amateur cook at best. I was looking for a book that would increase my knowledge about ingredientes, spices, techniques, and equipment in the kitchen. This is the book for me. I can read it for hours at a time, and will keep reading it over and over to learn all of the techniques. The best part is that it explains what is actually happening with the molecules in the food, which allows me to apply the knowledge and techniques in unorthodox ways. It is great to know things like why medium rare beef tastes best to most people, how to cook food to acceptable safety standards (I like some meat more rare than FDA recommended, nice to know options and risks.), and also great to know why some things fail in the kitchen. The only bad side of this book is the interviews. The book is probably 1/2 scientific techniques and knowledge from the author, 1/8 recipes, and the remainder 3/8 interviews. The interviews are written in question/answer format, but can be very dry as many of them do not relate directly to ingredients or techniques in the kitchen. I could read this book from front to back, except I fall asleep during the interviews. And there are so many of them. Only a few of the interviews have been useful in increasing my knowledge in the kitchen. The rest just reiliterate topics that were already presented in very long winded manner, or have nothing to do with cooking (a lot of talking about creating food blogs...I am an amateur, I will not be writing food blogs, and do not feel that they are essential to the cooking process.).Although I am not a fan of the interviews, the book contains enough useful information that it deserves at least 5 stars. Very well written and scientifically sound.

5.0 out of 5 stars The fun side of cooking

r. · December 9, 2011

I like cookbooks, not just for the recipes, but also to read. This one meets that need perfectly. It's such an interesting look at food and its preparation. I was looking for a Christmas gift for my son-in-law when I found this. He's a former IT guy and is now a nurse. He loves the creative side of cooking. One Christmas, he made bacon ice cream for all of us (not the same way that was demonatrated in the video above!). I can't wait to see his reaction to this. I have looked through the book and have just ordered a second one for my son. He was a bio-med science major in college and is now an optometrist. He, too, enjoys the creative side of cooking. I think he will also enjoy it. I am debating on getting one for my daughter and other son-in-law. They are both Hotel/Restaurant majors/grads. My daughter now teaches in the program. It's been awhile since she's taught the class on food born illnesses, but that information is in here as well. Might be a good resource for them.I admit to not having cooked any of the recipes. I've have read some interesting ones, however. I have really enjoyed the odd tips and hints (one was putting the muffin tin on the open door of the dishwasher to spray it with cooking spray). I have a feeling this will be one of those books passed around after opening on Christmas. Good thing we will have two!

4.0 out of 5 stars Formatting problems with Kindle edition fixed

C. · August 5, 2010

I downloaded the free trial (which is generous, covering the contents table, the index, the first 3 chapters, and part of the 4th chapter, out of a 7 chapter book) and decided not to buy for the reasons I describe below. This review is based on that trial version. It is possible that the problems I had would not appear in the full version.The Kindle edition is said to be optimized for the larger screen of the Kindle DX. Unfortunately, it does not seem to be decently formatted for Kindle at all. The problems I found were present in both on my Kindle DX and in Kindle for Mac.There appear to be many illustrations, but what I got in the Kindle edition was captions which either had no picture or had a picture unrelated to the caption and the surrounding text. I could match up a few of the pictures (which are mostly very small) with distant parts of the text, but many were missing altogether. I did not find a single picture that was near the right place and had a matching caption. This seems to be a beta release of the book, being sold at a premium price by Kindle standards.There are also problems with displaying tables: sometimes we get columns that each contain a fraction of a word, and sometimes the table can't be shown in full even with panning. It is possible that these result from problems with Bolo's software. Likewise, sidebars and footnotes are inherently hard to handle on any device that reformats the book on the fly to fit the screen, font size and other settings, so the relatively minor issues they cause are forgivable.The book's content is mostly good, though it is unnecessarily padded with interviews, and contains oddly interspersed recipes (probably in sidebars in the hard copy book). There is the basic advice that we'd get from any cook book, but the aim is to teach us underlying principles, such as the important bits of the chemistry of cooking, so we don't have to rely on following a recipe slavishly then wondering what went wrong if it did not work out.If you don't get or enjoy geeky jokes and references to software engineering, or if you'd rather be told what to do in detail instead of how things work in general, look elsewhere. If you are fascinated to learn which amino acids cause the umami taste, or you'd like to know how to calibrate your oven thermostat, or you get a kick out of a dangerous-looking demonstration of how to make ice cream using liquid nitrogen, then this book is a good place to go. If you care about the layout issues, I suggest checking whether they've been fixed before buying the Kindle edition.I'll revise this review if the layout problems are fixed for the Kindle. In the meantime, 4.5 for content (for its target audience) and 2 for Kindle usability, averaging to 3 stars.UPDATE April 3, 2011.==============I bought the full Kindle version right away, as I mentioned in replies to some comments. My apologies for not updating sooner: new job, state, city and house intervened.The formatting problems were less than I had feared but were still present with the full purchased version. Fortunately, O'Reilly (the publishers) are not like most others and pretty quickly produced an improved version which has few, if any, formatting issues. If only all publishers were as conscientious.Getting the most out of an e-copy of this book really needs a screen big enough to handle the layout of the original, with its tables, photographs, sketches and sidebars. I have used the Kindle version on my Kindle DX and on my iPod Touch. The Kindle does not always handle the pictures and so on well; the iPod is too small to do the book justice. This is one case where, for me, reading on the Kindle is not as satisfying as usual. The appearance on my laptop screen is much better, but that's my least-favorite way to read a book. Perhaps someone who has read it on an iPad can comment on whether that is better.But I like the book a lot more than it might appear from all these criticisms. If I had waited for the paper copy I'd have written a 4 or 5 star review at the start. I'm glad to have the book in some form, and with the improved layout the author's presentation comes across better. I'd now give 4.5 stars for the content (I like the emphasis on underlying principles but still think there's a bit of padding) and 3.5 for the pleasure and practicality of using the Kindle version. I've revised my score to 4 stars.

Estupendo libro para empezar a cocinar

J. · April 11, 2015

Pese a las múltiples referencias frikis que contiene (por ejemplo: compiladores, algoritmos...) no es un libro dedicado en exclusiva a a geeks, sino un libro para todos aquellos que a la hora de cocinar no quieran sólo saber que hacer, sino cómo hacerlo.Plagado de explicaciones, te explicara desde cómo funciona el sentido del gusto a como mejorar el entrecruzamiento del gluten para obtener bollos más esponjosos. Desde como cocinar correctamente una crepe (y sus 100 desastrosos primeros intentos), hasta el arte de desnaturalizar el colágeno con poco calor para obtener deliciosa carne de pato. No es un libro para cocinar el día a día (aunque tiene muchas recetas válidas), sino para comprender una receta cualquiera, para entender por qué las cosas se hacen como se hacen, o por qué unas recetas se hornean a 160 ºC y otras a 180 ºC.Muy recomendable si deseas saber más sobre cocina o eres una persona de mente curiosa a la que no le asusta experimentar.

Good for geeks.

A. · February 25, 2015

There is now an edition of this book in Portuguese. When I bought this one, it was not translated yet.The book presents the kitchen in a different perspective, sometimes based on chemistry reactions or physics phenomena. Explains things like how the temperature affect the food, changes driven by chemicals like salt or sugar, etc. Saying it that way, may seem that the book is too technical or monotonous, which is not true. Well written, with lots of interesting information, presents many answers for questions that a curious mind may have. A geek thing.It also contains recipes with measures expressed in both imperial and metric system, making the reading easier for non-Americans. I believe it is worth to buy.

Ottimo

D. · June 1, 2014

This book is exactly what the title says, and since I am a big geek, I loved it :-)You will get recipes, physics and chemistry and improve the way you make food.

amazing book

r. · September 29, 2013

it's cooking, kitchen tools and more explained in a way an engineer/designer would like to understand what goes on when cooking, and what goes on when things don't work as they were supposed to. It gives you an insight on why things work out in a certain way when cooking and this way helps you realize when and how to use your tools, how certain reactions cook the food and how to get the results you are aiming for. It's not a cook book although some nice recipes are included to help visualize the theory.

Toller Einstieg ins Kochen, mit technischen Details

S. · October 21, 2013

Ich habe dieses Buch für einen (englischsprachigen) Freund zum Geburtstag gekauft. Natürlich habe ich das Buch auch vorher ausgiebig studiert!Das Buch ist für Nerds konzipiert, was man aber nur an gelegentlichen Vergleichen zu Programmiersprachen oder Programmierer-Vorurteilen merkt (nur Pizza etc.). Würde nicht "Cooking for Geeks" draufstehen, könnte man es auch jedem anderen Kochanfänger schenken. Schön finde ich, dass in den ersten Kapiteln erstmal die Motivation aufgebaut wird. Immer wieder wird wiederholt, wie einfach es eigentlich geht und wie schnell, dass man eigentlich keinen Fehler machen kann, dass man ruhig Experimente wagen soll, etc.Interessant wird es dann vor allem, wenn chemische Vorgänge erklärt werden. Die "Maillard-Reaktion" z.B. war mir nicht geläufig, und ich finde es auch gut zu wissen, bei welcher Temperatur eigentlich was mit Proteinen passiert. Dabei ist das beim täglichen Kochen+Backen eigentlich ganz wichtig! Schön erklärt ist auch, was mit was ersetzt werden kann, was beim Gehen von Hefe eigentlich passiert, was der Unterschied zu Backpulver ist etc. .Am Schluss wird sogar auf Molekularküche eingegangen. Das Buch ist umfangreich und detailiert, ohne langweilig zu werden - deswegen 5 Sterne.

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