It's an excellent book. Here's a review I published in November 2004. (Prices updated.)
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<img src="http://www.wineloverspage.com/graphics1/mcgee.jpg" border="0" align="right"></td></tr></table>If you like FoodTV's wacky Alton Brown but sometimes wish that he would get <i>really</i> serious about food science, you're going to love Harold McGee.
With none of Brown's goofiness but with substantially more intense scholarship, McGee's <i>On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen</i> has become a cult classic for "foodies" who can't get enough information about what really goes on in the oven - and in our stomachs - when we cook and eat. A massive volume - its 894 pages in hardcover tip my kitchen scale at 3 pounds, 1 1/4 ounces - its 15 densely packed chapters cover foods from milk and dairy products and eggs to sauces, sugars, chocolate and confectionery, not to mention "The Four Basic Food Molecules." (All right, they're water, fats, carbohydrates and proteins.)
While much of this may be of more interest to "foodies" than "winoes," the 67-page Chapter 13 ("Wines, Beers and Spirits") is worth the price of admission alone for those who are more interested in grapes, grain and malt than salads, meats, cakes and cookies. This chapter covers an amazing variety of drinks-related science, from the physiology of hangovers to the ancient Sumerian hymn to Ninkasi, the goddess who presided over early beer brewing. One table, more comprehensive than anything of its like I've seen, lists the specific chemical molecules associated with more than 30 different aromas in wine. If it intrigues you to know that the "kerosene" scent in some Rieslings actually comes from trimethyldihydronaphthalene, then this book is definitely for you. And if not ... maybe it's not.
Here's the info and buy-it link at Amazon.com for <I>On Food and Cooking</I>:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/ ... rswineloA/
(List price $40, Amazon.com sale price $26.40, a 34 percent discount. If you should use this link to buy the book, we'll earn a small commission to help pay the rent at WineLoversPage.com.)