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Does anyone know of some good resources to start learning about food chemistry? I am thinking specifically about a description of the chemical processes involved e.g. in cooking/preparing the different foods and their relation with changes in flavor etc.

Also: do you know a reliable source to understand what is the purpose of all food additives used by the industry? Here I am not thinking about colorant/preservatives and the like, but more about the "strange supernumerary" ingredients we can see on industrial food's labels.

Glorfindel
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Myrrdyn
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  • See also: http://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/1710/which-food-writers-do-you-take-to-bed, and the food-science tags on this site, http://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/food-science. – Ocaasi Aug 14 '10 at 02:43

2 Answers2

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McGee on Food and Cooking: An Encyclopedia of Kitchen Science, History and Culture will answer most questions on what the chemistry is behind most cooking processes, without being too academic.

FordBuchanan
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To update this 2010 question, McGee is still active and an excellent primary source. He has done more work in addition to the book in the accepted answer. You might also look into Arielle Johnson, formerly of MIT and currently Alton Brown's chief science officer. She has a ton of experience.

I believe both McGee and Johnson have new books coming out soon.

moscafj
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