What Einstein Kept Under His Hat: Secrets of Science in the Kitchen (16 page)

THE FOODIE’S FICTIONARY:
Arugula—the sound of a Model T’s horn

                               

SPILLED MILK

                               

What is it about soy milk that makes it boil over? One of my recipes requires cooking the soy milk. I found I was able to accomplish this without having it boil over as long as I only simmered it. What is the chemistry behind this?

....

I
have often wondered how they milk those little soybeans, haven’t you?

Sorry. Soy milk is made by soaking, boiling, grinding, and pressing the liquid out of soybeans. The liquid is called “milk” because it is white, but it bears as little relationship to cow’s milk as does milk of magnesia.

Soy milk is a tempting alternative to cow’s milk because it is higher in protein, lower in fat (and calcium), and free of cholesterol and lactose, which millions of lactose-intolerant people are incapable of digesting properly. When fortified with calcium and vitamins, it can be used as infant formula for the estimated 7 percent of babies in the United States who cannot digest cow’s milk.

Nevertheless, soy milk is far from a substitute for natural milk, either in flavor or in many culinary applications. For one thing, the soybean-crushing process releases an enzyme, lipoxygenase, that catalyzes the oxidation of the beans’ unsaturated fatty acids into unpleasant-tasting compounds. While that doesn’t seem to bother Asian consumers, the enzyme must be deactivated for most Western palates by heating the “milk” to a temperature near its boiling point for 15 to 20 minutes.

Which takes us back to the stove.

Plants contain various sugar-related chemicals called glycosides that serve a wide range of functions. Some of the glycosides in soybeans are called saponins (from the Latin
sapo
, meaning soap) because they foam up into suds when boiled. They are the source of your boiling-over problem. But heat destroys the saponins, so a period of gentle heating will slowly eliminate the foaming tendency. That’s why you can get away with simmering soy milk but not with boiling it, unless you simmer it first.

THE FOODIE’S FICTIONARY:
Lactose—a congenital foot deformity

                        

Not-Very-Indian Pudding

                        

I
magine soft polenta that tastes like gingerbread. That’s Indian pudding.

The eighteenth-century New England colonists referred to the New World’s maize as “Indian corn,” and a pudding containing cornmeal eventually became known as Indian pudding. Of course, Native Americans didn’t have soybeans, and neither did the colonists, but vanilla soy milk is an effective stand-in for the milk used in recipes for one kind of Indian pudding.

When ice cream is melted and stirred into the pudding, it is just as good as, and maybe better than, the milk or light cream that is usually called for in recipes for Indian pudding. The recipe is also delicious made with cow’s milk and cow’s-milk ice cream. The leftover pudding will thicken overnight, and it is delicious cold or hot. Try it for breakfast.

4     cups (1 quart) vanilla soy milk

1
/
3
  cup yellow cornmeal

1     tablespoon unsalted butter

1
/
2
  cup dark molasses

1     teaspoon ground cinnamon

1
/
2
  teaspoon ground ginger

1
/
2
  teaspoon salt

1
/
2
  cup vanilla soy ice cream, melted

       Vanilla soy ice cream for serving

1.
    Place a rack in the lower part of the oven. Preheat the oven to 300°F. In a small bowl, mix 1 cup of the soy milk with the cornmeal. Let stand.

2.
    In a medium saucepan, slowly heat 2 cups of the soy milk over medium-high heat until bubbles form around the edge of the pan. Gradually stir the cornmeal mixture into the hot soy milk. Reduce the heat to medium and cook, stirring, for 10 minutes. The mixture will be thin.

3.
    Add the remaining 1 cup soy milk and the butter, molasses, cinnamon, ginger, and salt, and stir just until the butter is melted. The mixture will be thin.

4.
    Turn the pudding into an ungreased 1
1
/
2
-quart casserole. Bake, uncovered, for 2 hours. The pudding will have a slightly dark film on the top.

5.
    Remove the pudding from the oven. Stir in the melted ice cream, combining it thoroughly until the pudding is smooth. Return the pudding to the oven and bake, uncovered, for 30 minutes longer.

6.
    Let the pudding cool on a wire rack for 2 hours. It will thicken as it cools, and a light skin will form. Just before serving, stir in the skin, then spoon the pudding into dessert dishes and serve slightly warm with a scoop of vanilla soy ice cream.

MAKES 8 OR MORE SERVINGS

                             

ODE TO TOFU

                             

There seem to be a dozen forms of tofu in my supermarket. I know that tofu is made from soybeans, but how do they make so many kinds?

....

T
hey begin by curdling soy milk, and then they manipulate the curds in different ways.

A variety of acids, enzymes, bacteria, and salts are able to coagulate the proteins in soy milk, that is, to unwind their long, twisted molecules, allowing them to rebind (
cross-link
) to one another like rungs in ladders, forming a tightly tangled, solid network that separates out from the liquid. As in coagulated real milk, the proteins form curds, from which the tofu is made.

Real milk is usually curdled by rennet, a stomach-lining membrane in the fourth stomach of an unweaned calf, and containing the protein-digesting enzyme rennin, or chymosin. (Makes you wonder how
that
little technique was discovered, eh? But see below.) The rest of the animal presumably ends up as “milk-fed veal.” The curds are then fermented by molds or bacteria, aged and ripened into cheese.

(If only apocryphally, the story of rennet’s discovery goes back to biblical times, when wine, milk, and other essential liquid foods were carried in containers made from the cleaned stomachs of calves or sheep. Perhaps a less than meticulously cleaned calf’s stomach was used to carry milk on a trek across the desert, whereupon some residual rennin coagulated it into curds. Then, with the help of ambient bacteria they fermented, and
voilà!
—cheese.)

Soy milk, on the other hand, is generally curdled by acids or salts rather than by rennin. The Japanese have traditionally used
nigari
, the bitter, salty non-sodium-chloride residue (mostly magnesium chloride) left over from the evaporation of seawater in making sea salt. Today, calcium sulfate is most often used. The curds are then pressed into blocks called tofu.

Purists insist that tofu isn’t “bean curd,” as it is often called in English. The curd itself is called
oburo
in Japanese; it isn’t tofu until it has been pressed so that the whey—the liquid that was left behind when the curdling took place—is squeezed out.

Various degrees of pressure and duration of pressing make tofu cakes of various consistencies from soft to firm and extra-firm. Little cubes of soft tofu can be tossed in salads, whereas the firmer, stronger forms will withstand deep-frying. Tofu is the modeling clay of cooking; it can be mashed, blended, formed, or cut into shapes and sizes to conform to almost any kind of dish, from salad dressings and sauces to sautés, stir-fries, and deep-fries. And it has the almost magical quality of absorbing the flavors of whatever it is cooked with.

Unlike cheese, which has already been attacked by voracious bacteria and/or molds and ripened often beyond olfactory appeal, tofu is a delicate, perishable product. It is sold vacuum-packed, or soaking in plastic containers of water, or in aseptic packages, or in bulk.

“Silken tofu,” a smooth, custardy tofu, is manufactured by a method more like making yogurt than making cheese. Instead of coagulating the soy milk and draining off the whey, makers of silken tofu add a chemical called glucono-delta-lactone (GDL), obtained by the action of an enzyme (
glucose oxidase
) on glucose. The mixture is then packaged in its retail containers and heated mildly at 175 to 195°F (79 to 91°C) for about an hour. During that time the GDL spontaneously turns (
hydrolyzes
) into gluconic acid, which thickens the proteins into a homogeneous gel, with no separation of whey. It can be eaten with a spoon, like yogurt or custard.

All tofu should be refrigerated and used within a week. If it is kept in water, the water should be changed daily. It can be frozen, but the texture upon thawing will be chewier because freezing tightens up the proteins and squeezes out more whey. When it thaws, the tofu has a spongelike texture that enhances its ability to soak up flavorful liquids if cooked with other foods.

THE FOODIE’S FICTIONARY:
Soybean—Spanish for “I am a bean.”

                        

I GO, YOU GO, WE ALL GO FOR MISO

                        

I love the flavor of the miso soup I’ve had in Japanese restaurants, but I don’t know what miso is. Can I buy some and experiment with it at home?

....

A
bsolutely. Miso, known as “fermented soybean paste” in English, is one of the most versatile products you can find in Japanese and Korean markets. It’s sold either by itself, to be used in home cooking, or already incorporated into soups, salad dressings, and sauces.

Like soy milk and tofu, miso begins with soaked, steamed, and ground or chopped soybeans. A certain mold, known as
Aspergillus oryzae
in Latin,
koji
in Japanese, and “a certain mold” in English, is added to the heavily salted soybeans, either by themselves or mixed with rice, barley, or chickpeas. (The Japanese use the same mold to make sake.) Traditionally, the fermentation is allowed to proceed for two or three years, until the desired intensity of flavor and color is achieved. Today, the process may be hurried by heating and other accelerating techniques. The role of the salt is to prevent the mixture from spoilage by less friendly microorganisms while the
Aspergillus
, which doesn’t mind salt, works away at it.

There are dozens of kinds of miso, ranging in flavor from salty to sweet to salty-and-sweet, in color from ivory to coffee to dark brown, and in texture from smooth and creamy to lumpy. American chefs are having a field day experimenting with them, and you can, too. Try s
hiro
, a light miso, or
aka
, a darker, heartier version.

Once you discover miso, it won’t be a stranger on the shelf. Because of its intense flavor it needs to be balanced with other ingredients. Add it to a vinaigrette and serve with asparagus, artichokes, or a tossed garden salad. Or make miso soup by stirring a spoonful or two of the paste into vegetable broth and adding
udon
noodles.

                        

Miso-Glazed Black Bass

                        

T
he most common type of miso found in American markets is a thick paste that looks like crunchy peanut butter and comes in a range of colors, from beige to very dark brown. This salty, richly flavored condiment perks up the flavor of soups and marinades.

Because it is so thick, miso must always be blended with a bit of liquid before being added to a dish. Miso is available in most supermarkets and in Asian groceries. Any shade of light-colored miso will work fine in this recipe.

Tommy Klauber, owner-chef of Pattigeorge Restaurant on Florida’s Longboat Key, serves this dish to rave reviews. Because he always has lobster on hand (doesn’t everybody?), he uses lobster consommé as his poaching liquid. We’ll use mirin and sake. You will need to marinate the fish for at least 2 hours or even overnight before broiling it. Have the vegetable garnish ready before you begin to cook the fish.

MARINADE:

6     tablespoons white or yellow miso

1
/
3
  cup sugar

1
/
4
  cup mirin (Japanese sweet rice cooking wine)

1
/
4
  cup sake

4     black sea bass or black cod fillets, each about
6  ounces and
3
/
4
to 1 inch thick)

GARNISH:

1     tablespoon peanut oil

1
/
2
  teaspoon toasted sesame oil

1     cup each julienned carrot, fennel, and sweet red pepper

POACHING LIQUID:

1     cup water

3     tablespoons mirin

2     tablespoons sake

1.
    Make the marinade: In a small bowl, whisk together the miso, sugar, mirin, and sake until smooth. Transfer the mixture to a 1-quart zipper-top plastic bag. Add the fish fillets, turning them to coat, seal the bag, and refrigerate for 2 to 4 hours or up to overnight.

2
.
    Make the garnish: In a large skillet, combine the peanut oil and sesame oil over low heat. Add the carrot, fennel, and sweet red pepper and cook for about 5 minutes, or until softened but not browned. Set aside.

3.
    Bring the fish and marinade to room temperature. Preheat the broiler.

4.
    Remove the fish fillets from the marinade. Place them, along with any marinade that clings to them, in a 9-inch pie pan or small baking pan with sides. Do not crowd the pan. Discard the remaining marinade.

5
.    Make the poaching liquid: Measure the water in a microwave-safe measuring pitcher and stir in the mirin and sake. Heat in the microwave for 1 minute. Pour enough poaching liquid into the pan to come about one-third up the sides of the fillets, about
1
/
4
inch. This steams the fish a bit while allowing the top of the fillets to brown lightly under the broiler.

6.
    Broil for 5 to 6 minutes, or just until opaque in the center. For the most succulent results, the fish should be barely done in the center, and moist.

7.
    Serve the fish in warmed, wide, shallow bowls. Spoon some of the cooking liquid, about
1
/
4
cup per serving, into each bowl. Garnish with the softened julienned vegetables, arranged alongside the fillets.

MAKES 4 SERVINGS

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