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White House chef whips up desserts with chemistry

By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard, Ap Medical Writer

Sat Feb 19, 3:37 pm ET

WASHINGTON Some sweetened tangerine juice. A little soy protein. A blender.

Voila: A trendy, frothy dessert becomes a lesson in kitchen chemistry.

It turns out the chef who whips up pies for the president is also a bit of a

scientist calling on knowledge of how to help bubbles hold their shape and

how crystals affect chocolate and salt, in the quest for healthier goodies.

You wouldn't think taste tests would be on the menu, er, agenda when the

American Association for the Advancement of Science assembles some of the

world's leading molecular biologists and geneticists and astronomers for a

once-a-year look at exciting discoveries.

But White House pastry chef Bill Yosses exchanged his white apron for a bow tie

Saturday to talk with scientists about how chefs are changing perceptions of

taste. He brought samples chocolates that gleamed, and that tangerine foam

that held up spoonfuls of juicy berries for about an hour.

His point: Texture plays a huge role in taste.

Consider chocolate mousse with its sumptuous mouth feel, caused largely by

added cream that, Yosses notes, also clogs arteries. He substitutes water and

gelatin for cream to deliver that feel with less fat.

Or take that tangerine foam. The soy protein helps form structures around the

air bubbles from Yosses' blender. Look, he said as he spooned a plateful: "It's

just tangerine juice, but we can fill the whole plate."

Maximize texture to maximize a taste, Yosses said, and suddenly people are

happy with fewer bites a message that goes hand in hand with the

healthy-eating mantra of his bosses, President Barack Obama and first lady

Michelle Obama. Dessert in moderation, he said, can be part of a healthy

balanced diet.

"What chefs want to achieve with modern cooking is a kind of fascination with

food" that also is "able to move people toward a healthier approach to eating,"

Yosses told the researchers.

In fact, the science of taste is a booming field. It tells us that taste is

incredibly complicated, an interaction of the tongue, the nose, psychological

cues and exposure to different flavors.

Kraft Foods research scientist Jane Leland brought samples, too yellow jelly

beans. Pinch your nose closed, she told the crowd. Now take a few chews of a

jelly bean. It tastes sweet, from taste receptors on the tongue.

OK, release the nose and chew some more. Whoa, now lemon flavor bursts forth.

Aroma molecules move through the back of the mouth to the nasal cavity and

reach the olfactory bulb, she explained.

For all its cellular commonalities, taste is incredibly individual and our

earliest exposures to different foods helps determine the flavors we like and

dislike, said Gary Beauchamp of the nonprofit Monell Chemical Senses Center in

Philadelphia.

Components of flavor can transmit in amniotic fluid, Beauchamp said, citing a

study that gave carrot juice to women in the last trimester of pregnancy. At

age 6 months, babies drank carrot juice for the first time, and those who'd

been exposed in the womb liked it more than babies who hadn't been exposed.

A different study examined how babies react to a special hydrolized-protein

formula that may help them digest but that Beauchamp said tastes "just awful."

Babies given it before they're 3 months old don't mind; they suck down bottles

with gusto. But if they don't taste it until they're older? A video showed a

tot's whole face screw up in a grimace as he pushed the bottle away.

Infants similarly develop a preference for saltier foods the earlier they taste

them, he said, and that's important because Americans eat more than double the

amount of salt necessary for good health.

That brings us back to the texture lesson from the White House's Yosses. Sodium

is sodium whether it's in the fine grains of the typical salt shaker or large

chunks of trendy sea salt, he said.

But larger crystals melt more slowly on the tongue, so sea salt can be "very

satisfying," he said. That's why he uses that type for salted caramel.

"It really is texture as taste. But if you're going to do that, you have to

reduce it (sodium) somewhere else," he said.

In the same way, the quality of chocolate depends on how its sugar crystals

line up, Yosses said. The best literally shines and causes "a nice crack when

you bite." That crunch lets Yosses get away with thin layers of chocolate in a

dessert "that's more satisfying even though it's small."