Category Archives: Uncategorized

New blog site


Bill Gates: Can Science Improve Cooking?

Can Science Improve Cooking? A blog post and video on Bill Gates’ blog thegatesnotes

 

"The pictures alone make the book a masterpiece. You can see how food changes as it cooks, and understand how different flavors come together to make something really great."

 

The Sous Vide Professional at Nathan Myhrvold's kitchen lab

 


“When Science enters the kitchen” – MSNBC

Wilson Rothman from MSNBC produced this great segment about the connection of science and the kitchen. The video features the symbiosis of Chef Grant Achatz at Alinea Restaurant in Chicago and PolyScience Culinary Technology. It gives some insights into Chef Achatz’ approach, the PolyScience factory and Philip Preston’s kitchen laboratory.  Below are some of the snapshots of the clip. If you have some patience for advertising clips you can see the video here.

Sous Vide Professional at Alinea Restaurant

The Anti-Griddle in action at Alinea kitchen

PolyScience factory in Niles, Illinois

Sous Vide Professionals are manufactured in sunny Niles, Illinois

Behind the scenes...

Philip Preston's garage is the place where the first Frankenstein versions of new cooking equipment are developed. Some fail, some make it...

The new PolyScience Sonicprep™

The probe of the Sonicprep™ applies 20,000 cycles of high-frequency ultrasonic waves per second to liquids.

Sonicprep™ emulsions are produced in less than 90 seconds and stable for days without any emulsifying agent

Homemade Calvados is infused with whisky barrel wood chips. The Sonicprep™ simulates 2 year barrel aging in 2 minutes

The Snowmachine... it can produce strawberry-flavored snow. It just doesn't do it fast enough yet for a restaurant.


Intl. Design Award for Sous Vide Professional

The PolyScience Sous Vide™ Professional wins the 2010 International Design Award for Product Design. It received the Bronze award in the category Other Products. Click here to read more and to see the interesting variations of the design concept.


Elderflower Smoked Griddled Halloumi

Elderflower Smoked Griddled Halloumi – by Chef Eddie Shepherd
300g Halloumi
Dried Elderflower

Heat a griddle pan to a medium high heat.

Slice the Halloumi into centimetre thick pieces. Cook the Halloumi for about a minute on each side (giving it a half turn while cooking each side to get a criss cross pattern if you like)

Once cooked set the Halloumi slices to one side to cool.

Trim the cooked Halloumi to even squares and place into a glass bowl.

Cover the bowl with cling film and smoke using the Polyscience Smoking Gun, loaded with dried elderflower, filling the covered bowl with smoke. Sit covered for around five minutes to allow the Halloumi to take on the flavour of the elderflower smoke.

Continue reading for the recipes of the Rhubarb Relish & Rhubarb Glass on Chef Eddie’s blog


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